Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Publications

New York Water Science Center publications

►To fine-tune a search for USGS publications, try the USGS Publications Warehouse.

Filter Total Items: 683

Water resources data, New York, water year 2002, Volume 3, western New York

Water resources data for the 2002 water year for New York consist of records of stage, discharge, and water quality of streams; stage and contents of lakes and reservoirs; water levels and water quality of ground-water wells; and quantity and chemical quality of precipitation. This volume contains records for water discharge at 70 gaging stations; stage only at 15 gaging stations; stage and conten
Authors
J.F. Hornlein, Carolyn O. Szabo, D. A. Sherwood, S.K. McInnes

Water resources data, New York, water year 2002, volume 2, Long Islan

Water resources data for the 2002 water year for New York consist of records of stage, discharge, and water quality of streams; stage, contents, and water quality of lakes and ponds; stage and water quality of estuaries; and water levels and water quality of ground-water wells. This volume contains records for water discharge at 15 gaging stations; lake stage at 6 gaging stations; tide stage at 5
Authors
A. G. Spinello, R. Busciolano, G.P. Pena-Cruz, R.B. Winowitch

Geohydrology of the Valley-Fill aquifer in the Norwich-Oxford-Brisben area, Chenango County, New York

This set of maps and geohydrologic sections depicts the geology and hydrology of aquifers in the 21.9-square-mile reach of the Chenango River valley between Brisben and North Norwich, N.Y. This report depicts the principal geographic features of the study area; locations of domestic, commercial, and municipal wells from which data were obtained to construct water-table and saturated-thickness maps
Authors
Kari K. Hetcher, Todd S. Miller, James D. Garry, Richard J. Reynolds

Hydrogeology of the Tully Trough, southern Onondaga County and northern Cortland County, New York

A trough valley near Tully, N.Y. was formed by the same glacial processes that formed the Finger Lake valleys to the west. Glacial ice eroded a preglacial bedrock divide along the northern rim of the Allegheny Plateau and deepened a preglacial valley to form a trough valley. Subsequent meltwater issuing from the ice transported and deposited large amounts of sediment which partly filled the trough
Authors
William M. Kappel, Todd S. Miller

Water resources of Monroe County, New York, water years 1997-99, with emphasis on water quality in the Irondequoit Creek basin—Atmospheric deposition, ground water, streamflow, trends in water quality, and chemical loads to Irondequoit Bay

Irondequoit Creek drains 169 square miles in the eastern part of Monroe County. Over time, nutrients transported by Irondequoit Creek to Irondequoit Bay on Lake Ontario have contributed to the eutrophication of the bay. Sewage-treatment-plant effluent, a major source of nutrients to the creek and its tributaries, was eliminated from the basin in 1979 by diversion to a regional wastewater-treatment
Authors
Donald A. Sherwood

Ground-water resources of the Clifton Park area, Saratoga County, New York

Ground water is the sole source of public water supply for Clifton Park, a growing suburban community north of Albany, New York. Increasing water demand, coupled with concerns over ground-water quantity and quality, led the Clifton Park Water Authority in 1995 to initiate a cooperative study with the U.S. Geological Survey to update and refine the understanding of ground-water resources in the are
Authors
Paul M. Heisig

Hydrogeology and extent of saltwater intrusion on Manhasset Neck, Nassau County, New York

Manhasset Neck, a peninsula on the northern shore of Long Island, N.Y., is underlain by unconsolidated deposits that form a sequence of aquifers and confning units. Ground water at several public-supply wells has been affected by the intrusion of saltwater from the surrounding embayments (Manhasset Bay, Long Island Sound, Hempstead Harbor). Twenty-two boreholes were drilled during 1992-96 for the
Authors
Frederick Stumm, Andrew D. Lange, J.L. Candela

History and hydrologic effects of ground-water use in Kings, Queens, and western Nassau Counties, Long Island, New York, 1800's through 1997

Ground-water withdrawals from the aquifers underlying Kings and Queens Counties varied temporally and spatially during the 20th century and caused extreme changes in water levels. The resultant lowering of water levels during periods of heavy pumping caused saltwater intrusion in nearshore areas and the migration of contaminants from land surface into deep aquifers. The recovery of water levels in
Authors
Richard A. Cartwright

Simulated transport and biodegradation of chlorinated ethenes in a fractured dolomite aquifer near Niagara Falls, New York

Leakage of trichloroethene (TCE) from a neutralization pond at a former manufacturing facility near Niagara Falls, N.Y. during 1950-87 into the Guelph Formation of the Lockport Group, a fractured dolomite aquifer, created a plume of TCE and its metabolites that, by 1990, extended about 4,300 feet south of the facility. A smaller plume of dense, nonaqueous-phase liquids (DNAPL) probably serves as a
Authors
Richard M. Yager

Stormflow-hydrograph separation based on isotopes: the thrill is gone--what's next?

Beginning in the 1970s, the promise of a new method for separatingstormflow hydrographs using18O,2H, and3Hprovedanirresistibletemptation, and was a vast improvement over graphical separationand solute tracer methods that were prevalent at the time. Eventu-ally, hydrologists realized that this new method entailed a plethoraof assumptions about temporal and spatial homogeneity of isotopiccomposition
Authors
Douglas A. Burns

Potential effects of structural controls and street sweeping on stormwater loads to the lower Charles River, Massachusetts

The water quality of the lower Charles River is periodically impaired by combined sewer overflows (CSOs) and non-CSO stormwater runoff. This study examined the potential non-CSO load reductions of suspended solids, fecal coliform bacteria, total phosphorus, and total lead that could reasonably be achieved by implementation of stormwater best management practices, including both structural controls
Authors
Phillip J. Zarriello, Robert F. Breault, Peter K. Weiskel

Concentrations of pesticides and pesticide degradates in the Croton River Watershed in southeastern New York, July-September 2000

Thirty-seven pesticides and (or) pesticide degradates were detected in baseflow samples collected from 47 stream sites in the Croton River Watershed (374 square miles) in southeastern New York in the summer of 2000. The Croton Reservoir provides about 10 percent of New York City's water supply. Maximum concentrations of most pesticides detected did not exceed 0.1 μg/L (micrograms per liter). This
Authors
Patrick J. Phillips, Robert W. Bode