Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Publications

This list of Water Resources Mission Area publications includes both official USGS publications and journal articles authored by our scientists. A searchable database of all USGS publications can be accessed at the USGS Publications Warehouse.

Filter Total Items: 18464

Pesticides in ground water: Current understanding of distribution and major influences

This report summarizes a comprehensive analysis of existing information on national and regional patterns of pesticides in the atmosphere and major influences on their sources and transport. It is one of a four-part series that synthesizes current knowledge and understanding of pesticides in water resources of the nation as part of the National Water-Quality Assessment.
Authors

Relation of land use to nitrate in the surficial aquifer along the Straight River, north-central Minnesota, 1992-93

The U.S. Geological Survey studied the relation of land use to nitrate concentrations in the surficial aquifer along the Straight River near Park Rapids in north-central Minnesota (see adjacent map) during 1992 to 1993. Concern about health hazards to humans and livestock from use of ground water contaminated by nitrate prompted the study. Data collected for this study included: (1) water levels f
Authors
J. F. Ruhl

Statewide Floods in Pennsylvania, January 1996

Rivers and streams throughout Pennsylvania (fig. 1) experienced major flooding during January 1996. Flood stages (water-surface heights) and discharges (flows) in many of the Commonwealth's waterways were measured by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and approached or exceeded record levels established during previous floods. Setting the stage for the flooding was an unusually cold beginning to th
Authors
R.E. Thompson

Occurrence of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in urban streams as assessed using semipermeable membrane devices, Dallas-Fort Worth metropolitan area, Texas

One of the primary goals of the U.S. Geological Survey's National Water Quality Assessment (NAWQA) Program is to determine the occurrence and distribution of contaminants in stream sediments and tissues of aquatic organisms (Crawford and Luoma, 1993). Metals and persistent organic contaminants are of principal concern. Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are a group of organic compounds that o
Authors
J. Bruce Moring

Nitrate in groundwater and water sources used by riparian trees in an agricultural watershed: A chemical and isotopic investigation in southern Minnesota

This study evaluates processes that affect nitrate concentrations in groundwater beneath riparian zones in an agricultural watershed. Nitrate pathways in the upper 2 m of groundwater were investigated beneath wooded and grass-shrub riparian zones next to cultivated fields. Because trees can be important components of the overall nitrate pathway in wooded riparian zones, water sources used by ripar
Authors
Stephen C. Komor, Joseph A. Magner

Summary of the Snake River plain Regional Aquifer-System Analysis in Idaho and eastern Oregon

Regional aquifers underlying the 15,600-square-mile Snake River Plain in southern Idaho and eastern Oregon was studied as part of the U.S. Geological Survey's Regional Aquifer-System Analysis program. The largest and most productive aquifers in the Snake River Plain are composed of Quaternary basalt of the Snake River Group, which underlies most of the 10,8000-square-mile eastern plain. Aquifer te
Authors
G. F. Lindholm

Suspended-sediment characteristics of Indiana streams, 1952-84

Suspended-sediment concentration and discharge data were collected at 7 daily record stations and 70 partial-record stations during 1952- 84. Median suspended-sediment concentrations ranged from 24 to 61 milligrams per liter at daily record stations; concentrations ranged from 6 to 539 milligrams per liter at partial-record stations. Most suspended sediment transported in Indiana streams is silt a
Authors
Charles G. Crawford, Lawrence J. Mansue

Episodic acidification of small streams in the northeastern United states: Effects on fish populations

As part of the Episodic Response Project (ERP), we studied the effects of episodic acidification on fish in 13 small streams in the northeastern United States: four streams in the Adirondack region of New York, four streams in the Catskills, New York, and five streams in the northern Appalachian Plateau, Pennsylvania. In situ bioassays with brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis) and a forage fish spe
Authors
J.P. Baker, J. Van Sickle, C.J. Gagen, David R. DeWalle, W.E. Sharpe, R.F. Carline, Barry P. Baldigo, Peter S. Murdoch, D.W. Bath, W.A. Kretser, H. A. Simonin, P.J. Wigington

Episodic acidification of small streams in the northeastern United States: Fish mortality in field bioassays

In situ bioassays were performed as part of the Episodic Response Project, to evaluate the effects of episodic stream acidification on mortality of brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis) and forage fish species. We report the results of 122 bioassays in 13 streams of the three study regions: the Adirondack mountains of New York, the Catskill mountains of New York, and the Northern Appalachian Plateau
Authors
J. Van Sickle, J.P. Baker, H. A. Simonin, Barry P. Baldigo, W.A. Kretser, W.E. Sharpe

Episodic acidification of small streams in the northeastern United States: Ionic controls of episodes

As part of the Episodic Response Project (ERP), we intensively monitored discharge and stream chemistry of 13 streams located in the Northern Appalachian region of Pennsylvania and in the Catskill and Adirondack Mountains of New York from fall 1988 to spring 1990. The ERP clearly documented the occurrence of acidic episodes with minimum episodic pH ≤ 5 and inorganic monomeric Al (Alim) concentrati
Authors
P.J. Wigington, David R. DeWalle, Peter S. Murdoch, W.A. Kretser, H. A. Simonin, J. Van Sickle, J.P. Baker

Episodic acidification of small streams in the northeastern United States: Episodic response project

The Episodic Response Project (ERP) was an interdisciplinary study designed to address uncertainties about the occurrence, nature, and biological effects of episodic acidification of streams in the northeastern United States. The ERP research consisted of intensive studies of the chemistry and biological effects of episodes in 13 streams draining forested watersheds in the three study regions: the
Authors
P.J. Wigington, J.P. Baker, David R. DeWalle, W.A. Kretser, Peter S. Murdoch, H. A. Simonin, J. Van Sickle, M.K. Mcdowell, D.V. Peck, W.R. Barchet
Was this page helpful?