Water-quality, streamflow, and ancillary data for nutrients in streams and rivers across the nation, 1992-2001
David K. Mueller, Norman E. Spahr
2005, Data Series 152
Introduction: This report is the companion data report for: Nutrients in Streams and Rivers Across the Nation - 1992-2001 (D.K. Mueller and N.E. Spahr, U.S. Geological Survey written commun., 2005). The data contained in this report were collected as part of the National Water-Quality Assessment (NAWQA) Program. Investigations were conducted...
Locations and data for water wells of the Santa Rosa Valley, Sonoma County, California
Zenon C. Valin, Robert J. McLaughlin
2005, Open-File Report 2005-1318
No abstract available....
Log of Trench 04A across the Hayward Fault at Tyson's Lagoon (Tule Pond), Fremont, Alameda County, California
James J. Lienkaemper, Patrick L. Williams, Robert R. Sickler, Thomas E. Fumal
2005, Open-File Report 2005-1350
This publication makes available a detailed trench log (sheets 1 and 2) of a 110-m trench we excavated in 2004 across a tectonic sag pond in the Hayward fault zone. Also included are revised stratigraphic unit descriptions from this fifth field season of subsurface investigation of the Hayward fault at...
Compilation of concentrations of total selenium in water, coal in bottom material, and field measurement data for selected streams in eastern Kentucky, July 1980
Maureen A. Downing-Kunz, Michael D. Unthank, Angela S. Crain
2005, Open-File Report 2005-1354
Sedimentology and sequence stratigraphy of the Cretaceous Nanushuk, Seabee, and Tuluvak formations exposed on Umiat Mountain, north-central Alaska
David W. Houseknecht, Christopher J. Schenk
2005, Professional Paper 1709-B
Upper Cretaceous strata of the upper part of the Nanushuk Formation, the Seabee Formation, and the lower part of the Tuluvak Formation are exposed along the Colville River on the east flank of Umiat Mountain in north-central Alaska. The Ninuluk sandstone, which is the uppermost unit of the Nanushuk Formation,...
SEGY to ASCII Conversion and Plotting Program 2.0
Mark R. Goldman
2005, Open-File Report 2005-1311
INTRODUCTION SEGY has long been a standard format for storing seismic data and header information. Almost every seismic processing package can read and write seismic data in SEGY format. In the data processing world, however, ASCII format is the 'universal' standard format. Very few general-purpose plotting or computation programs will accept...
Aerial gamma-ray, Landsat TM, and digital elevation data, Big Bend area, Texas
Joseph S. Duval
2005, Open-File Report 2005-1371
No abstract available....
Spatial and temporal variations in oceanographic and meteorologic forcing along the central California coast, 1980-2002
Curt D. Storlazzi, Dana K. Wingfield
2005, Scientific Investigations Report 2005-5085
Since the 1980s, our understanding of such important large-scale phenomena as El Ni?o events and the California Current System that drive physical, chemical, and biologic processes along the U.S. west coast has greatly improved. However, our ability to predict the influence of annual and interannual events on a regional scale...
Micromorphologic evidence for paleosol development in the Endicott group, Siksikpuk formation, Kingak(?) shale, and Ipewik formation, western Brooks range, Alaska
Julie A. Dumoulin, Tim White
2005, Professional Paper 1709-E
Micromorphologic evidence indicates the presence of paleosols in drill-core samples from four sedimentary units in the Red Dog area, western Brooks Range. Well-developed sepic-plasmic fabrics and siderite spherules occur in claystones of the Upper Devonian through Lower Mississippian(?) Kanayut Conglomerate (Endicott Group), the Pennsylvanian through Permian Siksikpuk Formation (Etivluk Group), the...
Thermobarometric constraints on mid-Cretaceous to late Cretaceous metamorphic events in the western metamorphic belt of the Coast Mountains complex near Petersburg, southeastern Alaska
Glen R. Himmelberg, David A. Brew
2005, Professional Paper 1709-C
The western metamorphic belt is part of the Coast Mountains Complex of southeastern Alaska and western Canada. This complex formed as a result of mid-Cretaceous through middle Eocene crustal shortening between the previously amalgamated Wrangellia and Alexander terranes (Insular superterrane) and previously accreted terranes of the North American continental margin...
Handbook of capture-recapture analysis
Steven C. Amstrup, Trent L. McDonald, Bryan F.J. Manly, editor(s)
2005, Book
Every day, biologists in parkas, raincoats, and rubber boots go into the field to capture and mark a variety of animal species. Back in the office, statisticians create analytical models for the field biologists' data. But many times, representatives of the two professions do not fully understand one another's roles....
Upper Auglaize watershed AGNPS modeling project
Ronald L. Bingner, Kevin Czajkowski, Michael Palmer, James Coss, Steve Davis, Jim Stafford, Norm Wideman, Fred D. Theurer, G. F. Koltun, Pete Richards, Tony Friona
2005, Report
The Upper Auglaize Watershed agricultural non-point source modeling project was an interagency effort to use a Geographic Information System (GIS)-based modeling approach for assessing and reducing pollution from agricultural runoff and other non-point sources. This project applied the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), Agricultural Research Service’s AGricultural Non-Point Source (AGNPS) suite of models...
Water-quality assessment of Lake Houston near Houston, Texas, 2000-2004
Debra A. Sneck-Fahrer, Matthew S. Milburn, Jeffery W. East, Jeannette H. Oden
2005, Scientific Investigations Report 2005-5241
Lake Houston is a major source of public water supply and recreational resource for the Houston metropolitan area, Texas. Water-quality issues of potential concern for the lake have included nutrient enrichment (orthophosphorus, total phosphorus, nitrite plus nitrate) and aquatic life use (dissolved oxygen). The , in cooperation with the City...
Water Resources Data New York Water Year 2004, Volume 3: Western New York
J.F. Hornlein, Carolyn O. Szabo, H.J. Zajd, M.J. Welsh
2005, Water Data Report NY-04-3
Water resources data for the 2004 water year for Western New York consist of records of stage, discharge, and water quality of streams; stage and contents of lakes and reservoirs; ground-water levels and water quality; and quantity and chemical quality of precipitation. This volume contains records for water discharge at...
Water Resources Data New York Water Year 2004, Volume 2: Long Island
A.G. GeSpinello, R.J. Busciolano, G.P. Pena-Cruz, R.B. Winowitch
2005, Water Data Report NY-04-2
Water resources data for the 2004 water year for Long Island New York consist of records of stage, discharge, and water quality of streams; stage, contents, and water quality of lakes and reservoirs; stage and water quality of estuaries; and water levels and water quality of ground-water wells. This volume...
Water Resources Data New York Water Year 2004, Volume 1: Eastern New York Excluding Long Island
G.K. Butch, P.M. Murray, L.T. Brooks, Kenneth McGrath, D.D. Edwards
2005, Water Data Report NY-04-1
Water resources data for the 2004 water year for Eastern New York Excluding Long Island consist of records of stage, discharge, and water quality of streams; stage, contents, and water quality of lakes and reservoirs; and ground-water levels. This volume contains records for water discharge at 150 gaging stations; stage...
Miocene rapakivi granites in the southern Death Valley region, California, USA
James P. Calzia, O.T. Ramo
2005, Earth-Science Reviews (73) 221-243
Rapakivi granites in the southern Death Valley region, California, include the 12.4-Ma granite of Kingston Peak, the ca. 10.6-Ma Little Chief stock, and the 9.8-Ma Shoshone pluton. All of these granitic rocks are texturally zoned from a porphyritic rim facies, characterized by rapakivi textures and miarolitic cavities, to an equigranular...
Guidelines 13 and 14—Prediction uncertainty
Mary C. Hill, Claire R. Tiedeman
2005, Book chapter, Effective Groundwater Model Calibration: With Analysis of Data, Sensitivities, Predictions, and Uncertainty
An advantage of using optimization for model development and calibration is that optimization provides methods for evaluating and quantifying prediction uncertainty. Both deterministic and statistical methods can be used. Guideline 13 discusses using regression and post-audits, which we classify as deterministic methods. Guideline 14 discusses inferential statistics and Monte Carlo...
Using the tracer-dilution discharge method to develop streamflow records for ice-affected streams in Colorado
Joseph P. Capesius, Joseph R. Sullivan, Gregory B. O’Neill, Cory A. Williams
2005, Scientific Investigations Report 2004-5164
Accurate ice-affected streamflow records are difficult to obtain for several reasons, which makes the management of instream-flow water rights in the wintertime a challenging endeavor. This report documents a method to improve ice-affected streamflow records for two gaging stations in Colorado. In January and February 2002, the U.S. Geological Survey,...
Base flow in the Great Lakes Basin
B.P. Neff, S.M. Day, A.R. Piggott, L. M. Fuller
2005, Scientific Investigations Report 2005-5217
Hydrograph separations were performed using the PART, HYSEP 1, 2, and 3, BFLOW and UKIH methods on 104,293 years of daily streamflow records from 3,936 streamflow-gaging stations in Ontario, Canada and the eight Great Lakes States of Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin to estimate base-flow...
Surficial geologic interpretation and sidescan sonar imagery of the sea floor in west-central Long Island Sound
K. Y. McMullen, L. J. Poppe, V.F. Paskevich, E. F. Doran, M. S. Moser, E. B. Christman, A. L. Beaver
2005, Open-File Report 2005-1018
The United States Geological Survey (USGS) is working cooperatively with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and Connecticut Department of Environmental Protection (CT-DEP) to conduct detailed studies of the surficial geology in Long Island Sound (LIS). The study goals are to interpret sedimentary environments within the Sound, to further understand processes controlling sediment distribution, and...
Effects of removing Good Hope Mill Dam on selected physical, chemical, and biological characteristics of Conodoguinet Creek, Cumberland County, Pennsylvania
Jeffrey J. Chaplin, Robin A. Brightbill, Michael D. Bilger
2005, Scientific Investigations Report 2005-5226
The implications of dam removal on channel characteris-tics, water quality, benthic invertebrates, and fish are not well understood because of the small number of removals that have been studied. Comprehensive studies that document the effects of dam removal are just beginning to be published, but most research has focused on...
Simulation of conservative-constituent transport in the Red River of the North Basin, North Dakota and Minnesota, 2003-04
Rochelle A. Nustad, Jerad D. Bales
2005, Scientific Investigations Report 2005-5273
Population growth along with possible future droughts in the Red River of the North (Red River) Basin will create an increasing need for reliable water supplies. Therefore, as a result of the Dakota Water Resources Act of 2000, the Bureau of Reclamation identified eight water-supply alternatives (including a no-action alternative)...
USGS east-coast sediment analysis: Procedures, database, and GIS data
L.J. Poppe, K. Y. McMullen, S.J. Williams, V.F. Paskevich, editor(s)
2005, Open-File Report 2005-1001
PrefaceSediments off the eastern United States vary markedly in texture - the size, shape, and arrangement of their grains. For descriptive purposes, however, it is typically most useful to classify these sediments according to their grain-size distributions. Starting in 1962, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and the Woods Hole Oceanographic...
Assessment, water-quality trends, and options for remediation of acidic drainage from abandoned coal mines near Huntsville, Missouri, 2003-2004
Eric D. Christensen
2005, Scientific Investigations Report 2005-5202
Water from abandoned underground coal mines acidifies receiving streams in the Sugar Creek Basin and Mitchell Mine Basin near Huntsville, Missouri. A 4.35-kilometer (2.7-mile) reach of Sugar Creek has been classified as impaired based on Missouri's Water Quality Standards because of small pH values [< (less than) 6.5]. Samples collected...