Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Publications

Below are the publications attributed to Kansas Water Science Center.

Filter Total Items: 1060

Explaining spatial variability in mean annual runoff in the conterminous United States

The hydrologic concepts needed in a water-balance model to estimate the spatial variation in mean annual runoff for the 344 climate divisions in the conterminous United States (U.S.) were determined. The concepts that were evaluated were the climatic supply of water (precipitation), climatic demand for water (potential evapotranspiration), seasonality in supply and demand, and soil-moisture-storag
Authors
David M. Wolock, Gregory J. McCabe

Metolachlor and its metabolites in tile drain and stream runoff in the canajoharie creek watershed

Water samples collected during April−November 1997 from tile drains beneath cultivated fields in central New York indicate that two metabolites of the herbicide metolachlormetolachlor ESA (ethanesulfonic acid) and OA (oxanilic acid)can persist in agricultural soils for 4 or more years after application and that fine-grained soils favor the transport of metolachlor ESA over metolachlor and metolach
Authors
P. J. Phillips, G. R. Wall, E. M. Thurman, D. A. Eckhardt, J. Vanhoesen

Surface water-ground water interaction: Herbicide transport into municipal collector wells

During spring runoff events, herbicides in the Platte River are transported through an alluvial aquifer into collector wells located on an island in the river in 6 to 7 d. During two spring runoff events in 1995 and 1996, atrazine [2-chloro-4-ethylamino-6-isopropylamino-s-triazine] concentrations in water from these wells reached approximately 7 µg/L, 70 times more than the background concentratio
Authors
Ingrid M. Verstraeten, J.D. Carr, G. V. Steele, E.M. Thurman, K.C. Bastian, D.F. Dormedy

Occurrence of acetanilide herbicide metabolites in tile runoff and ground

No abstract available.
Authors
E.M. Thurman, D.W. Kolpin, S. J. Kalkhoff, P. J. Phillips

Geographic Information Systems Laboratory at Haskell Indian Nations University

No abstract available.
Authors
Thomas J. Trombley, Michael D. Kemppainen

Herbicides in Rainfall Across the Midwestern and Northeastern United States, 1990-91

No abstract available.
Authors
John K. Stamer, Donald A. Goolsby, E. Michael Thurman

Occurrence of cotton pesticides in surface water of the Mississippi Embayment

No abstract available.
Authors
E. Michael Thurman, Lisa R. Zimmerman, Elisabeth A. Scribner, Richard H. Coupe

Advanced technology used to monitor ground water in a restricted access area of Fort Riley, Kansas

The purpose of this fact sheet is to describe how advanced communication technology is being used to overcome difficulties in collecting reliable ground-water data in areas with restricted access, such as at Fort Riley in northeast Kansas.
Authors
J.D. Breedlove, P.J. Finnegan, N. C. Myers

Atrazine in Source Water Intended for Artificial Ground-Water Recharge, South-Central Kansas

Atrazine, an herbicide commonly applied to row crops, is of concern because of potential effects on water quality. This fact sheet describes atrazine in water from the Little Arkansas River in south-central Kansas. The river is being evaluated as a source of artificial recharge into the Equus Beds aquifer, which provides water for the city of Wichita.
Authors
Victoria G. Christensen, Andrew C. Ziegler

Selenium in Reservoir Sediment from the Republican River Basin

Reservoir sediment quality is an important environmental concern because sediment may act as both a sink and a source of water-quality constituents to the overlying water column and biota. Once in the food chain, sediment-derived constituents may pose an even greater concern due to bioaccumulation. An analysis of reservoir bottom sediment can provide historical information on sediment deposition a
Authors
Kyle E. Juracek, Andrew C. Ziegler

Watershed trend analysis and water-quality assessment using bottom-sediment cores from Cheney Reservoir, south-central Kansas

An examination of Cheney Reservoir bottom sediment was conducted in August 1997 to describe long-term trends and document the occurrence of selected constituents at concentrations that may be detrimental to aquatic organisms. Average concentrations of total phosphorus in bottom-sediment cores ranged from 94 to 674 milligrams per kilogram and were statistically related to silt- and (or) clay-size p
Authors
Larry M. Pope