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Publications

The list below includes official USGS publications and journal articles authored by New England Water Science Center scientists. The USGS Pubs Warehouse link provides access to all USSG publications.

Filter Total Items: 1082

Technology Transfer Opportunities: Automated Ground-Water Monitoring

Introduction A new automated ground-water monitoring system developed by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) measures and records values of selected water-quality properties and constituents using protocols approved for manual sampling. Prototypes using the automated process have demonstrated the ability to increase the quantity and quality of data collected and have shown the potential for reduc
Authors
Kirk P. Smith, Gregory E. Granato

Hydrogeologic framework of western Cape Cod, Massachusetts

The aquifer of western Cape Cod consists of several hydrogeologic units composed of sand, gravel, silt, and clay (fig. 1) that were deposited during the late Wisconsinan glaciation of New England. The aquifer is a shallow, unconfined hydrologic system in which ground-water flows radially outward from the apex of the ground-water mound near the center of the peninsula toward the coast (fig.2). The
Authors
John P. Masterson, Byron D. Stone, Donald A. Walter, Jennifer G. Savoie

Water Resources Data, New Hampshire and Vermont, Water Year 1996

No abstract available. 
Authors
M.F. Coakley, Chandlee Keirstead, R.O. Brown, G.S. Hildgendorf

Potential effects of climate change on freshwater ecosystems of the New England/Mid-Atlantic Region

Numerous freshwater ecosystems, dense concentrations of humans along the eastern seaboard, extensive forests and a history of intensive land use distinguish the New England/Mid-Atlantic Region. Human population densities are forecast to increase in portions of the region at the same time that climate is expected to be changing. Consequently, the effects of humans and climatic change are likely to
Authors
M.V. Moore, M. L. Pace, J.R. Mather, Peter S. Murdoch, R. W. Howarth, C.L. Folt, C.-Y. Chen, Harold F. Hemond, P.A. Flebbe, C. T. Driscoll

Streamwater chemistry and nutrient budgets for forested watersheds in New England: Variability and management implications

Chemistry of precipitation and streamwater and resulting input-output budgets for nutrient ions were determined concurrently for three years on three upland, forested watersheds located within an 80 km radius in central New England. Chemistry of precipitation and inputs of nutrients via wet deposition were similar among the three watersheds and were generally typical of central New England. In con
Authors
J.W. Hornbeck, S.W. Bailey, D.C. Buso, J. B. Shanley

Trends in surface-water quality in Connecticut

No abstract available.
Authors
Elaine C. Trench, B.A. Korzendorfer

Reporting of Real Time River Levels in Massachusetts and Rhode Island

Introduction In times of floods and droughts, immediate access to river level data is important to officials charged with the responsibilities of protecting lives and property by taking actions to diminish the adverse effects of the emergency. The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), in cooperation with many Federal, State, and local agencies, is the Nation's principal collector of accurate and unbia
Authors
Russell A. Gadoury

Effects of simulated ground-water pumping and recharge on ground-water flow in Cape Cod, Martha's Vineyard, and Nantucket Island basins, Massachusetts

Three-dimensional transient ground-water-flow models that simulate both freshwater and saltwater flow were developed for the flow cells of the Cape Cod Basin to determine the effects of long-term pumping and recharge, seasonal fluctuations in pumping and recharge, and prolonged reductions of natural recharge, on the position of the freshwater-saltwater interface, water-table and pond altitudes, an
Authors
John P. Masterson, Paul M. Barlow

Estimating ground-water recharge from streamflow hydrographs for a small mountain watershed in a temperate humid climate, New Hampshire, United States

Hydrographs of stream discharge were analyzed to determine ground-water recharge for two small basins draining into Mirror Lake, New Hampshire. Two methods of hydrograph analysis developed for determining ground-water recharge were evaluated, the instantaneous recharge method and the constant recharge method. For the instantaneous recharge method, recharge is assumed to be instantaneous and unifor
Authors
D.P. Mau, T. C. Winter

Ground-water flow and contaminant transport at a radioactive-materials processing site, Wood River Junction, Rhode Island

Liquid wastes from an enriched-uranium cold-scrap recovery plant at Wood River Junction, Rhode Island, were discharged to the environment through evaporation ponds and trenches from 1966 through 1980. Leakage from the ponds and trenches resulted in a plume of contaminated ground water extending northwestward to the Pawcatuck River through a highly permeable sand and gravel aquifer of glacial origi
Authors
Barbara J. Ryan, Kenneth L. Kipp

Hydrogeology and water quality of a surficial aquifer underlying an urban area, Manchester, Connecticut

The quality of water along flowpaths in a surficial aquifer system in Manchester, Connecticut, was studied during 1993-95 as part of the National Water Quality Assessment program. The flowpath study examined the relations among hydrogeology, land-use patterns, and the presence of contaminants in a surficial aquifer in an urban area, and evaluated ground water as a source of contamination to surfac
Authors
John R. Mullaney, Stephen J. Grady