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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: 18420

Water-table contours and depth to water in the southeastern part of the Sweetwater River basin, central Wyoming, 1982

This map describes the southeastern part of the Sweetwater River basin; the major aquifer consists of the upper part of the White River formations, all of Tertiary age, and to a small extent, the alluvium of the Quaternary age along the Sweetwater River. The saturated thickness of the aquifer in most of the area, but not including the alluvium ranges from 500 to 3000 ft. The maximum saturated thic
Authors
William B. Borchert

Pumpage of water in Louisiana, 1985

No abstract available.
Authors
Dee L. Lurry

Hydrogeologic and water-quality characteristics of glacial-drift aquifers in Minnesota

Water in Minnesota 's glacial drift aquifers generally is of acceptable quality for most uses, including household supply, industrial use, and irrigation. The aquifers generally contain calcium magnesium bicarbonate-type waters, but other types are present also. Calcium magnesium sulfate-type waters are common in the confined drift aquifers in the southwestern and northwestern parts of the State.
Authors
J. F. Ruhl

Percentage change in saturated thickness of the High Plains aquifer, west-central Kansas, 1950 to average 1985-87

Continuing studies are being made in west-central Kansas to provide up-to-date information that will aid in the management of groundwater for irrigation. This report, prepared by the U.S> Geological Survey in cooperation with the Western Kansas Groundwater Management District No. 1,  presents the results of the seventh in a series of studies that uses a statistical technique, called kriging, to pr
Authors
Barbara J. Dague

Water use in Wisconsin, 1985

An inventory of water use in Wisconsin is essential for appraising current and future water-resource needs of the State. The U.S. Geological Survey has collected and published national water-use data every 5 years since 1950. Sources of data in these reports have not always been well documented, and the methods for collecting and reporting the data were not the same for all States. Some planning a
Authors
B.R. Ellefson, K.S. Rury, J. T. Krohelski

Variable delay miniservo-control unit

No abstract available. 
Authors
M.A. Uhrich

Water quality of Canyon Lake, central Texas

No abstract available.
Authors
W.R. Roddy, K. M. Waddell

Predicting baseflow alkalinity as an index to episodic stream acidification and fish presence

Regression models to predict baseflow alkalinity from basin hydrogeology were developed and verified for headwater streams on the Laurel Hill anticline in southwestern Pennsylvania. Predicted baseflow alkalinities were then used to estimate sensitivity to acidification and presence of trout (Salvelinus fontinalis) populations for 61 headwater streams. Sensitivity classifications were verified by s
Authors
David R. DeWalle, Richard S. Dinicola, William E. Sharpe

The phytoplankton component of seston in San Francisco Bay

Phytoplankton biomass (as carbon) was estimated from chlorophyll a concentrations (Chla) and a mean value for the ratio of phytoplankton carbon to chlorophyll a in San Francisco Bay. The ratio was determined as the slope of a Model II regression of POC' against (Chla), where POC' is total particulate organic carbon minus sediment-associated non-phytoplankton carbon. Samples from 30 fixed sites in
Authors
S.M. Wienke, J. E. Cloern

Interaction of acid mine drainage with waters and sediments of West Squaw Creek in the West Shasta Mining District, California

Acid mine drainage has acidified large volumes of water and added high concentrations of dissolved heavy metals to West Squaw Creek, a California stream draining igneous rocks of low acid-neutralizing capacity. During mixing of the acid sulfate stream waters in the South Fork of West Squaw Creek with an almost equal volume of dilute uncontaminated water, Cu, Zn, Mn, and Al remained in solution rat
Authors
L.H. Filipek, D. Kirk Nordstrom, W. H. Ficklin

Water movement in the unsaturated zone at a low-level radioactive-waste burial site near Barnwell, South Carolina

Four unsaturated zone monitoring sites and a meteorologic station were installed at the low level radioactive waste burial site near Barnwell, South Carolina, to investigate the geohydrologic and climatologic factors affecting water movement in the unsaturated zone. The study site is located in the Atlantic Coastal Plain. The unsaturated zone consists of a few centimeters to > 1 m of surface sand,
Authors
K. F. Dennehy, P. B. McMahon