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Publications

Below are the publications attributed to Kansas Water Science Center.

Filter Total Items: 1060

Results of infiltration tests near Scott City, western Kansas

Several types of ring infiltrometers were used to determine infiltration rates in loessial soil near Scott City, Kansas. Test results were evaluated for consistency, and were compared with infiltration rates in the underlying loess and with hydraulic conductivities in the unsaturated zone.Average daily infiltration rates in the Richfield soil ranged from 3 to 5 feet or 0.9 to 1.5 m (metres) after
Authors
Joe B. Gillespie, G.D. Hargadine

Groundwater from Lower Cretaceous rocks in Kansas

Sandstones in Lower Cretaceous rocks contain supplies, of water that may be adequate to meet increasing present and future demands for supplemental municipal and domestic use in central and western Kansas. An estimated 70 to 80 million acre-feet (86,000 to 99,000 cubic hectometers) of water containing less than 1,000 milligrams per liter dissolved solids may be acceptable for use at the presen
Authors
Katherine M. Keene, Charles Knight Bayne

Ground water in the Grand (Neosho) River basin, Kansas and Oklahoma

Ground water in the Grand (Neosho) River basin occurs in both consolidated rocks and unconsolidated deposits. Water for domestic and stock supplies generally can be obtained from wells in either of the above deposits. Water for municipal, industrial, and irrigation supplies generally can be obtained in limited quantities from the unconsolidated deposits of sand and gravel and in adequate quantitie
Authors
Robert B. Morton, Stuart W. Fader

Land subsidence caused by dissolution of salt near four oil and gas wells in central Kansas

Collapse of the overlying strata into voids caused by dissolution of salt is the apparent cause of progressive land subsidence at the sites of several oil wells that were drilled through the salt beds of the Wellington Formation in Kansas. The purpose of this investigation was to determine if data from four sites, shown in figure 1, substantiate the hypothesis that corroded, broken, or improperly
Authors
Stuart Wesley Fader

Ground-water resources of Greeley and Wichita counties, Western Kansas

Unconsolidated deposits of sand, silt, clay, and gravel compose the principal aquifer in Greeley and Wichita Counties. The deposits are as much as 300 feet (91 m) 2/ thick, of which as much as 145 feet (44 m) is saturated.In 1972, there were about 1,040 large-capacity wells--yielding 100 gallons per minute (6.3 1/s) or more--in the counties, mostly for irrigation supplies. The wells yield as much
Authors
Steven E. Slagle, Edward C. Weakly

Water resources data for Kansas, water year 1974; Part 1, Surface water records

Water resources data for the 1974 water year for Kansas including records of stream-flow or reservoir storage at gaging stations, partial-record stations, and miscellaneous sites are given in this report. Records are included for 163 gaging stations of which 143 are streamflow discharge stations and 20 are reservoir or lake stations; also are included records for 23 low-flow partial-record station
Authors

Water resources of Gove, Logan, and Wallace Counties, west-central Kansas

This atlas presents information on the geology and water resources of a three-county area in west-central Kansas (index map). The report is intended promarily as a guide to the availability of ground water, which is the main source of supply for domestic, stock, inductrial, irrigation, and municipal uses. 
Authors
Thomas J. McClain, Edward D. Jenkins, Katherine M. Keene, Marilyn E. Pabst

Water development for irrigation in northwestern Kansas

Northwestern Kansas, an area of 8,050 square miles (21,000 square kilometres), is a flat to gently rolling plain that is dissected by the Smoky Hill and Republican Rivers. Loessial soils underlying the plain are ideal for cultivation.The climate is semiarid with the mean annual precipitation ranging from 16 to 21 inches (41 to 53 centimetres). Precipitation occurring mainly as thunderstorms during
Authors
Edward D. Jenkins, Marilyn E. Pabst

Ground water in the middle Arkansas River basin, Kansas and Oklahoma

Ground water in the Middle Arkansas River basin occurs in consolidated rocks and unconsolidated deposits. Wells for domestic and stock supply generally can be drilled successfully in consolidated rocks. Wells for large-scale municipal, industrial, and irrigation supplies generally are successful in areas underlain by saturated unconsolidated deposits of sand and gravel. Unconsolidated deposits in
Authors
Stuart Wesley Fader, Robert B. Morton

Ground water in the Verdigris River basin, Kansas and Oklahoma

Ground water in the Verdigris River basin occurs in consolidated rocks and unconsolidated deposits ranging in age from Mississippian to Quaternary. Water for municipal, industrial, and irrigation supplies generally can be obtained in limited quantities from the alluvial deposits in the stream valleys. Except for water in the alluvial deposits in the stream valleys and in the outcrop areas of the b
Authors
Stuart Wesley Fader, Robert B. Morton