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Publications

Browse the map above to filter and view publications by location. All of our publications are available through the USGS Publications Warehouse. USGS publications and journal articles by scientists of the Washington Water Science Center are listed below.

Filter Total Items: 771

Water-quality effects on Baker Lake of recent volcanic activity at Mount Baker, Washington

Increased volcanic activity on Mount Baker, which began in March 1975, represents the greatest known activity of a Cascade Range volcano since eruptions at Lassen Peak, Calif. during 1914-17. Emissions of dust and increased emanations of steam, other gases, and heat from the Sherman Crater area of the mountain focused attention on the possibility of hazardous events, including lava flows, pyroclas
Authors
Gilbert Carl Bortleson, Reed T. Wilson, B. L. Foxworthy

Hydrology of the North Cascades region, Washington: 2. A proposed hydrometeorological streamflow prediction method

On the basis of a linear relationship between winter (October-April) precipitation and annual runoff from a drainage basin (Rasmussen and Tangborn, 1976) a physically reasonable model for predicting summer (May-September) streamflow from drainages in the North Cascades region was developed. This hydrometeorological prediction method relates streamflow for a season beginning on the day of predictio
Authors
Wendell V. Tangborn, Lowell A. Rasmussen

Hydrology of the North Cascades region, Washington: 1. Runoff, precipitation, and storage characteristics

The time and space distributions of measured precipitation and measured runoff and of spring storage, which is approximately equal to the subsequent summer runoff of snowmelt and stored groundwater, have been analyzed for the North Cascades region of Washington. Neither precipitation nor runoff shows a consistent relationship with altitude, chiefly because of precipitation-shadowing effects in thi
Authors
Lowell A. Rasmussen, Wendell V. Tangborn

Reconnaissance of the water resources of the upper Klickitat River Basin, Yakima Indian Reservation, Washington

Large quantities of ground water and surface water are available in Washington County. Major sources of ground water are the Gosport Sand and Lisbon Formation undifferentiated, the Miocene Series undifferentiated, and alluvium and low terrace deposits. The Miocene, the most productive source of ground water, will yield 0.5 to 1.0 mgd (million gallons per day) per well and is a potential source of
Authors
Denzel R. Cline

Modeling coliform-bacteria concentrations and pH in the salt-wedge reach of the Duwamish River Estuary, King County, Washington

Total- and fecal-coliform bacteria, plus pH, alkalinity, and dissolved inorganic carbon are water-quality parameters that have been added to an existing numerical model of water quality in the salt-wedge reach of the Duwamish River estuary in Washington. The coliform bacteria are modeled using a first-order decay (death) rate, which is a function of the local salinity, temperature, and daily solar
Authors
W.L. Haushild, Edmund A. Prych

Low-flow characteristics of streams in the Grays Harbor drainages, Washington

No abstract available.
Authors
J. E. Cummans, Edmund George Nassar

Flood hazards in the Seattle-Tacoma urban complex and adjacent areas, Washington

Floods are natural hazards that have complicated man's land-use planning for as long as we have had a history. Although flood hzards are a continuing danger, the year-to-year threat cannot be accurately predicted. Also, on any one stream, the time since the last destructive flood might be so long that most people now living near the stream have not experienced such a flood. Because of the unpredic
Authors
B. L. Foxworthy, E.G. Nassar

Digital-simulation and projection of water-level declines in basalt aquifers of the Odessa-Lind area, east-central Washington

A digital computer program using finite-difference techniques simulates an intensively pumped, multilayered basalt-aquifer system near Odessa. The aquifers now developed are in the upper 1,000 feet of a regionally extensive series of southwesterly dipping basalt flows of the Columbia River Group. Most of the aquifers are confined. Those in the depth range of about 500 to 1,000 feet are the chief s
Authors
J. E. Luzier, James A. Skrivan

Magnitude and frequency of floods in Washington

Relations are provided to estimate the magnitude and frequency of floods on Washington streams. Annual-peak-flow data from stream gaging stations on unregulated streams having 1 years or more of record were used to determine a log-Pearson Type III frequency curve for each station. Flood magnitudes having recurrence intervals of 2, 5, i0, 25, 50, and 10years were then related to physical and climat
Authors
J. E. Cummans, Michael R. Collings, Edmund George Nasser

Gravity and aeromagnetic study of part of the Yakima River basin, Washington

No abstract available.
Authors
S. L. Robbins, Dean O. Gregg, R.J. Burt