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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: 18470

Water quality in the Hudson River basin, New York and adjacent states, 1992-95

No abstract available.
Authors
Gary R. Wall, Karen Murray-Riva, Patrick J. Phillips

Water quality in the central Nebraska basins, Nebraska, 1992-95

This report is intended to summarize major findings that emerged between 1992 and 1995 from the water-quality assessment of the Central Nebraska Basins Study Unit and to relate these findings to water-quality issues of regional and national concern. The information is primarily intended for those who are involved in waterresource management. Indeed, this report addresses many of the concerns raise
Authors
S.A. Frenzel, R.B. Swanson, T.L. Huntzinger, J. K. Stamer, P.J. Emmons, R. B. Zelt

Water quality in the Potomac River basin, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia, and the District of Columbia, 1992-96

No abstract available.
Authors
Scott W. Ator, Joel D. Blomquist, John W. Brakebill, Janet M. Denis, Matthew J. Ferrari, Cherie V. Miller, Humbert Zappia

Hydrogeologic studies at the USGS Amargosa Desert Research Site

In 1976, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) began studies of unsaturated-zone hydrology in the Amargosa Desert in support of the USGS Low-Level Radioactive Waste Program. In 1983, agreements with the Bureau of Land Management and the State of Nevada established two field study areas: a 16-ha area adjacent to a waste-burial facility 17 km south of Beatty and a 0.1-ha area about 3 km farther south (f
Authors
Brian J. Andraski, David A. Stonestrom

δ18O and δ15N determination in nitrate

No abstract available.
Authors
K. Revesz, John K. Böhlke, T. Yoshinari

Metal uptake by phytoplankton during a bloom in South San Francisco Bay: Implications for metal cycling in estuaries

The 1994 spring phytoplankton bloom in South San Francisco Bay caused substantial reductions in concentrations of dissolved Cd, Ni, and Zn, but not Cu. We estimate that the equivalent of ~60% of the total annual input of Cd, Ni, and Zn from local waste‐water treatment plants is cycled through the phytoplankton in South Bay. The results suggest that processes that affect phytoplankton bloom frequen
Authors
S. N. Luoma, A. VanGeen, B.-G. Lee, J. E. Cloern

Chemical weathering in a tropical watershed, Luquillo Mountains, Puerto Rico: I. Long-term versus short-term weathering fluxes

The pristine Rio Icacos watershed in the Luquillo Mountains in eastern Puerto Rico has the fastest documented weathering rate of silicate rocks on the Earth's surface. A regolith propagation rate of 58 m Ma-1 calculated from iso-volumetric saprolite formation from quartz diorite, is comparable to the estimated denudation rate (25-50 Ma-1) but is an order of magnitude faster than the global average
Authors
A. F. White, A.E. Blum, M. S. Schulz, D.V. Vivit, David A. Stonestrom, M. Larsen, S.F. Murphy, D. Eberl

Detection of aquifer system compaction and land subsidence using interferometric synthetic aperture radar, Antelope Valley, Mojave Desert, California

Interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR) has great potential to detect and quantify land subsidence caused by aquifer system compaction. InSAR maps with high spatial detail and resolution of range displacement (±10 mm in change of land surface elevation) were developed for a groundwater basin (∼103 km2) in Antelope Valley, California, using radar data collected from the ERS-1 satellite. Th
Authors
D. L. Galloway, K.W. Hudnut, S. E. Ingebritsen, S.P. Phillips, G. Peltzer, F. Rogez, P.A. Rosen

Contaminants in wintering canvasbacks and scaups from San Francisco Bay, California

Organochlorines, metals, and trace elements were measured in liver, kidney, or whole-body tissues of canvasbacks (Aythya valisineria), lesser scaups (A. affinis), and greater scaups (A. marila) collected from San Francisco Bay and three coastal areas of California during the winter of 1986–1987. Potentially toxic concentrations of mercury (mean ≤10.4 µg/g, dry weight) and selenium (mean ≤32.7 µg/g
Authors
Roger L. Hothem, D.G. Lonzarich, Jean E. Takekawa, Harry M. Ohlendorf

Pesticides in surface waters of the Santee River basin and coastal drainages, North and South Carolina

IntroductionThis report summarizes the available pesticide data for surface waters in the Santee River Basin and coastal drainages (SANT) study area, as part of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) National Water-Quality Assessment (NAWQA) Program. Data from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Storage and Retrieval database and data collected by the USGS in the SANT NAWQA study area were assesse
Authors
Terry L. Maluk, Robert E. Kelley

Geology, ground-water flow, and dissolved-solids concentrations in ground water along hydrogeologic sections through Wisconsin aquifers

A cooperative project between the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources (DNR) was begun with the objectives of describing water quality and its relation to the hydrology of Wisconsin's principal aquifers and summarizing instances of ground-water contamination and quality problems from information available in DNR files. The first objective was met by a hyd
Authors
P.A. Kammerer

Transport of agrichemicals to ground and surface water in a small central Indiana watershed

The occurrence, distribution, concentrations, and pathways of agrichemicals in water were investigated in the Sugar Creek watershed, a poorly drained agricultural watershed typical of many watersheds in the midwestern USA. Water samples from Sugar Creek, two tile drains, and 11 wells along a groundwater flowpath to Sugar Creek were collected between May 1992 and August 1996 and analyzed for N and
Authors
J.M. Fenelon, R.C. Moore
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