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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

Estimating quick-flow runoff at the monthly timescale for the conterminous United States

The quantitative estimation of the quick-flow runoff component of streamflow is required for many hydrologic applications. Estimation at the monthly timescale and national spatial scale would be particularly useful for national water availability modeling. This paper reviews a sample of commonly used equations for quick-flow runoff, including several currently in use in continental-scale models. T
Authors
Meredith Reitz, Ward E. Sanford

Annual wastewater nutrient data preparation and load estimation using the Point Source Load Estimation Tool (PSLoadEsT)

The Point-Source Load Estimation Tool (PSLoadEsT) provides a user-friendly interface for generating reproducible load calculations for point source dischargers while managing common data challenges including duplicates, incompatible input tables, and incomplete or missing nutrient concentration or effluent flow data. Maintaining a consistent method across an entire study area is important when est
Authors
Lillian E. Gorman Sanisaca, Kenneth D. Skinner, Molly A. Maupin

Point-source nutrient loads to streams of the conterminous United States, 2012

Total nitrogen and phosphorous loads were estimated for 5,430 major point-source facilities (all types) and 11,537 minor wastewater treatment facilities discharging to streams in the conterminous United States during 2012. Facilities classified as a major discharger are typically a facility that discharges greater than one million gallons of water per day however some industrial facilities are cla
Authors
Kenneth D. Skinner, Molly A. Maupin

Effects of climate, regulation, and urbanization on historical flood trends in the United States

Many studies have analyzed historical trends in annual peak flows in the United States because of the importance of flooding to bridges and other structures, and the concern that human influence may increase flooding. To help attribute causes of historical peak-flow changes, it is important to separate basins by characteristics that have different influences on peak flows. We analyzed historical t
Authors
Glenn Hodgkins, Robert Dudley, Stacey Archfield, Benjamin Renard

Investigation of recent decadal-scale cyclical fluctuations in salinity in the lower Colorado river

Beginning in the late 1970s, 10- to 15-year cyclical oscillations in salinity were observed at lower Colorado River monitoring sites, moving upstream from the international border with Mexico, above Imperial Dam, below Hoover Dam, and at Lees Ferry. The cause of these cyclical trends in salinity was unknown. These salinity cycles complicate the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation's (Reclamation) responsibi
Authors
Fred D. Tillman, Alissa L. Coes, David W. Anning, Jon P. Mason, Tyler B. Coplen

Groundwater Conditions in Utah, Spring of 2018

This is the fifty-fifth in a series of annual reports that describe groundwater conditions in Utah. Reports in this series, published cooperatively by the U.S. Geological Survey and the Utah Department of Natural Resources, Division of Water Rights, and the Utah Department of Environmental Quality, Division of Water Quality, provide data to enable interested parties to maintain awareness of changi
Authors
Lincoln Smith, Adam S. Birken, Phillip H. Klebba, Katherine K. Jones, V. Noah Derrick, Paul Downhour, Robert J. Eacret, Travis L. Gibson, Bradley A. Slaugh, Nickolas R. Whittier, Brandon P. Douglas, Douglas V. LaBonte, Martel J. Fisher

Fire, forests and city water supply

Forest landscapes generate 57 percent of runoff worldwide and supply water to more than 4 billion people (Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, 2005). As the world population continues to increase, there is a strong need to understand how forest processes link together in a cascade to provide people with water services like hydropower, aquaculture, drinking water and flood protection (Carvalho-Santos,
Authors
Dennis W. Hallema, Alicia M. Kinoshita, Deborah A. Martin, François-Nicholas Robinne, Mauricio Galleguillos, Steven G. McNulty, Ge Sun, Kunwar K. Singh, Rua S. Mordecai, Peter F. Moore

Comparison of groundwater age models for assessing nitrate loading, transport pathways, and management options in a complex aquifer system

In an aquifer system with complex hydrogeology, mixing of groundwater with different ages could occur associated with various flow pathways. In this study, we applied different groundwater age estimation techniques (lumped parameter model, and numerical model) to characterize groundwater age distributions and the major pathways of nitrate contamination in the Gosan agricultural field, Jeju Island.
Authors
E.H. Koh, E. Lee, D. Kaown, Christopher Green, D.C. Koh, K.K Lee, S.H. Lee

Prominence of the tropics in the recent rise of global nitrogen pollution

Nitrogen (N) pollution is shaped by multiple processes, the combined effects of which remain uncertain, particularly in the tropics. We use a global land biosphere model to analyze historical terrestrial-freshwater N budgets, considering the effects of anthropogenic N inputs, atmospheric CO2, land use, and climate. We estimate that globally, land currently sequesters 11 (10–13)% of annual N inputs
Authors
Minjin Lee, Elena Shevliakova, Charles A. Stock, Sergey Malyshev, Paul C. D. Milly

Lakes as paleoseismic records in a seismically-active, low-relief area (Rieti Basin, central Italy)

Small lakes in low relief areas are atypical candidates for studies on paleoseismicity, but their sediments can contain seismically induced event layers (seismites) generated through strong ground shaking, sediment transport, hydrological reorganization and/or changes in groundwater chemistry and flow. Lakes Lungo and Ripasottile are shallow lakes (
Authors
Claire Archer, Paula Noble, Michael R. Rosen, Leonardo Sagnotti, Fabio Fiorindo, Gianluca Piovesan, Scott Mensing, Alessandro Michetti

Biological effects of elevated major ions in surface water contaminated by a produced water from oil production

Produced water (PW) from oil and gas extraction processes has been shown to contain elevated concentrations of major ions. The objective of this study was to determine the potential effects of elevated major ions in PW-contaminated surface water on a fish (fathead minnow, Pimephales promelas) and a unionid mussel (fatmucket, Lampsilis siliquoidea) in short-term (7-day) exposures. The test organism
Authors
Ning Wang, James L. Kunz, Danielle M. Cleveland, Jeffery Steevens, Isabelle M. Cozzarelli

The natural wood regime in rivers

The natural wood regime forms the third leg of a tripod of physical processes that supports river science and management, along with the natural flow and sediment regimes. The wood regime consists of wood recruitment, transport, and storage in river corridors. Each of these components can be characterized in terms of magnitude, frequency, rate, timing, duration, and mode. We distinguish the natura
Authors
Ellen Wohl, Natalie Kramer, Virgina Ruiz-Villanueva, Daniel Scott, F. Comiti, Angela M Gurnell, Hervé Piégay, Katherine B. Lininger, Kristin Jaeger, David Walters, Kurt D. Fausch