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Page 967, results 24151 - 24175

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Publication Extents

Not all publications have extents, not all extents are completely accurate
Effects of intraborehole flow on groundwater age distribution
B.A. Zinn, Leonard F. Konikow
2007, Hydrogeology Journal (15) 633-643
Environmental tracers are used to estimate groundwater ages and travel times, but the strongly heterogeneous nature of many subsurface environments can cause mixing between waters of highly disparate ages, adding additional complexity to the age-estimation process. Mixing may be exacerbated by the presence of wells because long open intervals or...
Reactivation of a cryptobiotic stream ecosystem in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica: A long-term geomorphological experiment
Diane M. McKnight, C. M. Tate, E.D. Andrews, D.K. Niyogi, K. Cozzetto, K. Welch, W.B. Lyons, D.G. Capone
2007, Geomorphology (89) 186-204
The McMurdo Dry Valleys of Antarctica contain many glacial meltwater streams that flow for 6 to 12??weeks during the austral summer and link the glaciers to the lakes on the valley floors. Dry valley streams gain solutes longitudinally through weathering reactions and microbial processes occurring in the hyporheic zone. Some...
Competition between hardwood hammocks and mangroves
L.D.S.L. Sternberg, S.Y. Teh, S.M.L. Ewe, F. Miralles-Wilhelm, D.L. DeAngelis
2007, Ecosystems (10) 648-660
The boundaries between mangroves and freshwater hammocks in coastal ecotones of South Florida are sharp. Further, previous studies indicate that there is a discontinuity in plant predawn water potentials, with woody plants either showing predawn water potentials reflecting exposure to saline water or exposure to freshwater. This abrupt concurrent change...
Multiple-method estimation of recharge rates at diverse locations in the North Carolina Coastal Plain, USA
A. L. Coes, T.B. Spruill, M.J. Thomasson
2007, Hydrogeology Journal (15) 773-788
Recharge rates determined at diverse study sites in a shallow, unconfined aquifer differed from one another depending on the analytical method used and on each method's applicability and limitations. Total recharge was quantified with saturated-zone methods using water-table fluctuations at seven sites in North Carolina, USA and using groundwater-age dating...
Multiobjective analysis of a public wellfield using artificial neural networks
E.A. Coppola Jr., F. Szidarovszky, D. Davis, S. Spayd, M.M. Poulton, E. Roman
2007, Ground Water (45) 53-61
As competition for increasingly scarce ground water resources grows, many decision makers may come to rely upon rigorous multiobjective techniques to help identify appropriate and defensible policies, particularly when disparate stakeholder groups are involved. In this study, decision analysis was conducted on a public water supply wellfield to balance water...
Acid rain effects on aluminum mobilization clarified by inclusion of strong organic acids
G.B. Lawrence, J.W. Sutherland, C.W. Boylen, S. W. Nierzwicki-Bauer, B. Momen, Barry P. Baldigo, H. A. Simonin
2007, Environmental Science & Technology (41) 93-98
Assessments of acidic deposition effects on aquatic ecosystems have often been hindered by complications from naturally occurring organic acidity. Measurements of pH and ANCG, the most commonly used indicators of chemical effects, can be substantially influenced by the presence of organic acids. Relationships between pH and inorganic Al, which is...
Mercury and selenium in American White Pelicans breeding at Pyramid Lake, Nevada
Stanley N. Wiemeyer, J.F. Miesner, P. L. Tuttle, E.C. Murphy, L. Sileo, D. Withers
2007, Waterbirds (30) 284-295
American White Pelicans (Pelecanus erythrorhynchos) that breed on Anaho Island, Pyramid Lake, Nevada, are potentially exposed to a variety of contaminants. Therefore, the reproductive success of this colony was monitored in 1996 and eggs, blood and feathers from nestlings, livers from adults and nestlings, regurgitated fish from nestlings, and fish...
Development and implementation of a Bayesian-based aquifer vulnerability assessment in Florida
J. D. Arthur, H.A.R. Wood, A.E. Baker, J.R. Cichon, G. L. Raines
2007, Natural Resources Research (16) 93-107
The Florida Aquifer Vulnerability Assessment (FAVA) was designed to provide a tool for environmental, regulatory, resource management, and planning professionals to facilitate protection of groundwater resources from surface sources of contamination. The FAVA project implements weights-of-evidence (WofE), a data-driven, Bayesian-probabilistic model to generate a series of maps reflecting relative aquifer...
Characterization of suspended particles in Everglades wetlands
Gregory B. Noe, Judson W. Harvey, James E. Saiers
2007, Limnology and Oceanography (52) 1166-1178
We report the concentration, phosphorus (P) and nitrogen (N) content, and size and chemical fractionation of fine suspended particles (0.2‐100 µm) and colloids (3 kilodalton [kDa]‐0.1 µm) in the surface water of Everglades wetlands along regional and P‐enrichment gradients. Total suspended sediment concentrations ranged from 0.7 to 2.7 mg L−1....
Fractal topography and subsurface water flows from fluvial bedforms to the continental shield
A. Worman, A.I. Packman, L. Marklund, J. W. Harvey, S.H. Stone
2007, Geophysical Research Letters (34)
Surface-subsurface flow interactions are critical to a wide range of geochemical and ecological processes and to the fate of contaminants in freshwater environments. Fractal scaling relationships have been found in distributions of both land surface topography and solute efflux from watersheds, but the linkage between those observations has not been...
The relationship between productivities of salmonids and forest stands in northern California watersheds
S.L. Frazey, M.A. Wilzbach
2007, Western Journal of Applied Forestry (22) 73-80
Productivities of resident salmonids and upland and riporian forests in 22 small watersheds of coastal northern California were estimated and compared to determine whether: 1) upland site productivity predicted riparian site productivity; 2) either upland or riparian site productivity predicted salmonid productivity; and 3) other parameters explained more of the...
Forward model nonlinearity versus inverse model nonlinearity
S. Mehl
2007, Ground Water (45) 791-794
The issue of concern is the impact of forward model nonlinearity on the nonlinearity of the inverse model. The question posed is, "Does increased nonlinearity in the head solution (forward model) always result in increased nonlinearity in the inverse solution (estimation of hydraulic conductivity)?" It is shown that the two...
Organic compounds in produced waters from coalbed natural gas wells in the Powder River Basin, Wyoming, USA
W. H. Orem, C. A. Tatu, H.E. Lerch, C. A. Rice, T.T. Bartos, A. L. Bates, S. Tewalt, M.D. Corum
2007, Applied Geochemistry (22) 2240-2256
The organic composition of produced water samples from coalbed natural gas (CBNG) wells in the Powder River Basin, WY, sampled in 2001 and 2002 are reported as part of a larger study of the potential health and environmental effects of organic compounds derived from coal. The quality of CBNG produced...
Evaluation of an experimental LiDAR for surveying a shallow, braided, sand-bedded river
P.J. Kinzel, C. W. Wright, J. M. Nelson, A.R. Burman
2007, Journal of Hydraulic Engineering (133) 838-842
Reaches of a shallow (<1.0m), braided, sand-bedded river were surveyed in 2002 and 2005 with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Experimental Advanced Airborne Research LiDAR (EAARL) and concurrently with conventional survey-grade, real-time kinematic, global positioning system technology. The laser pulses transmitted by the EAARL instrument and the return backscatter...
Free zinc ion and dissolved orthophosphate effects on phytoplankton from Coeur d'Alene Lake, Idaho
James S. Kuwabara, Brent R. Topping, Paul F. Woods, James L. Carter
2007, Environmental Science & Technology (41) 2811-2817
Coeur d'Alene Lake in northern Idaho is fed by two major rivers: the Coeur d'Alene River from the east and the St. Joe River from the south, with the Spokane River as its outlet to the north. This phosphorus-limited lake has been subjected to decades of mining (primarily for zinc...
The importance of subsurface geology for water source and vegetation communities in Cherokee Marsh, Wisconsin
A.M. Kurtz, J.M. Bahr, Q. J. Carpenter, Randal J. Hunt
2007, Wetlands (27) 189-202
Restoration of disturbed wetland systems is an important component of wetland mitigation, yet uncertainty remains about how hydrologic processes affect biologic processes and wetlands patterns. To design more effective restoration strategies and re-establish native plant communities in disturbed wetlands, it is imperative to understand undisturbed systems. A site within Cherokee...
Climate correlates of 20 years of trophic changes in a high-elevation riparian system
T. E. Martin
2007, Ecology (88) 367-380
The consequences of climate change for ecosystem structure and function remain largely unknown. Here, I examine the ability of climate variation to explain long-term changes in bird and plant populations, as well as trophic interactions in a high-elevation riparian system in central Arizona, USA, based on 20 years of study....
Landscape controls on mercury in streamwater at Acadia National Park, USA
J.M. Peckenham, J. S. Kahl, S.J. Nelson, K.B. Johnson, T.A. Haines
2007, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (126) 97-104
Fall and spring streamwater samples were analyzed for total mercury (Hg) and major ions from 47 locations on Mount Desert Island in Maine. Samples were collected in zones that were burned in a major wildfire in 1947 and in zones that were not burned. We hypothesized that Hg concentrations in...
A post-Calumet shoreline along southern Lake Michigan
D.K. Capps, T.A. Thompson, R.K. Booth
2007, Journal of Paleolimnology (37) 395-409
The southern shore of Lake Michigan is the type area for many of ancestral Lake Michigan's late Pleistocene lake phases, but coastal deposits and features of the Algonquin phase of northern Lake Michigan, Lake Huron, and Lake Superior are not recognized in the area. Isostatic rebound models suggest that Algonquin...
Relative influence of streamflows in assessing temporal variability in stream habitat
R. M. Goldstein, M. R. Meador, K.E. Ruhl
2007, Journal of the American Water Resources Association (43) 642-650
The effects of streamflows on temporal variation in stream habitat were analyzed from the data collected 6-11 years apart at 38 sites across the United States. Multiple linear regression was used to assess the variation in habitat caused by streamflow at the time of sampling and high flows between sampling....
A classification of U.S. estuaries based on physical and hydrologic attributes
V.D. Engle, J.C. Kurtz, L.M. Smith, C. Chancy, P. Bourgeois
2007, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (129) 397-412
A classification of U.S. estuaries is presented based on estuarine characteristics that have been identified as important for quantifying stressor-response relationships in coastal systems. Estuaries within a class have similar physical and hydrologic characteristics and would be expected to demonstrate similar biological responses to stressor loads from the adjacent watersheds....
Temperature and diet effects on omnivorous fish performance: Implications for the latitudinal diversity gradient in herbivorous fishes
M.D. Behrens, K. D. Lafferty
2007, Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (64) 867-873
Herbivorous fishes show a clear latitudinal diversity gradient, making up a larger proportion of the fish species in a community in tropical waters than in temperate waters. One proposed mechanism that could drive this gradient is a physiological constraint due to temperature. One prediction based on this mechanism is that...
Arsenic incorporation into authigenic pyrite, Bengal Basin sediment, Bangladesh
Heather A. Lowers, George N. Breit, Andrea L. Foster, John W. Whitney, James Yount, Nehal Uddin, Ad. Atual Muneem
2007, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (71) 2699-2717
Sediment from two deep boreholes (∼400 m) approximately 90 km apart in southern Bangladesh was analyzed by X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS), total chemical analyses, chemical extractions, and electron probe microanalysis to establish the importance of authigenic pyrite as a sink for arsenic in...
First evidence of egg deposition by walleye (Sander vitreus) in the Detroit River
B.A. Manny, G.W. Kennedy, J.D. Allen, J. R. P. French III
2007, Journal of Great Lakes Research (33) 512-516
The importance of fish spawning habitat in channels connecting the Great Lakes to fishery productivity in those lakes is poorly understood and has not been adequately documented. The Detroit River is a reputed spawning and nursery area for many fish, including walleye (Sander vitreus) that migrate between adjacent Lakes Erie...
Impact of recent extreme Arizona storms
C. S. Magirl, R. H. Webb, Peter G. Griffiths, M. Schaffner, C. Shoemaker, E. Pytlak, S. Yatheendradas, S. W. Lyon, Peter A. Troch, S. L. E. Desilets, D.C. Goodrich, C.L. Unkrich, Ann Youberg, P. A. Pearthree
2007, Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union (88) 191-193
Heavy rainfall on 27–31 July 2006 led to record flooding and triggered an historically unprecedented number of debris flows in the Santa Catalina Mountains north of Tucson, Ariz. The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) documented record floods along four watercourses in the Tucson basin, and at least 250 hillslope failures spawned...