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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: 18468

Ground-water conditions in Georgia, 1992

No abstract available. 
Authors
Michael F. Peck, Alan M. Cressler

Water-quality data from continuously monitored sites in the Albemarle Sound estuarine system, North Carolina, 1989-91

Water-quality measurements were made at 11 sites in or near North Carolina?s Albemarle Sound. Measurements taken at 15-minute intervals included near-surface and near-bottom specific conductance; near-surface water temperature; and near-surface, mid-depth, and near-bottom dissolved-oxygen concentrations. Salinities generally ranged from less than 0.1 to about 32 parts per thousand during the pe
Authors
R. G. Garrett

Hydrogeologic, water-quality, and land-use data for the reconnaissance of herbicides and nitrate in near-surface aquifers of the Midcontinental United States, 1991

Water samples were collected during the spring and summer of 1991 from 303 wells penetrating near-surface unconsolidated and bedrock aquifers of the midcontinental United States. Samples were analyzed for 11 herbicides, 2 dealkylated atrazine metabolites, and 4 nutrients. Specific conductance, pH, and dissolved-oxygen concentrations of the ground water were measured onsite. Ancillary data on well
Authors
D.W. Kolpin, M. R. Burkart, E.M. Thurman

Water Resources Data, South Carolina, Water Year 1992

No abstract available.
Authors
C.S. Bennett, T.W. Cooney, K.H. Jones, J.W. Gissendanner

Water quality of the Upper West Branch Susquehanna River and tributary streams between Curwensville and Renovo, Pennsylvania, May and July 1984

The soils and rocks of the Upper West Branch Susquehanna River basin, from its headwaters downstream for 150 miles, are laden with pyritic materials that have the potential to produce acid mine drainage. The effects of mine drainage are severe, particularly in the reach between Curwensville and Renovo where present water quality cannot support viable populations of benthic macroinvertebrates or fi
Authors
R.A. Hainly, J. L. Barker

Agricultural chemical interchange between ground water and surface water, Cedar River basin, Iowa and Minnesota: A study description

A review of the data collected in the Cedar River basin, Iowa and Minnesota, indicates that atrazine is consistently detected in the main-stem river at concentrations greater than 0.10 microgram per liter even during periods of extended base flow. The primary source of atrazine in the river during these periods of base flow is not known. This study is designed to determine how atrazine and other a
Authors
P. J. Squillace, M. J. Liszewski, E.M. Thurman

Regional evaluations of acid deposition effects on forests: Eastern spruce-fir

Having reviewed the results of the Integrated Forest Study (IFS) project, we now try to place the results in a larger perspective by very briefly summarizing acid deposition effects and their potential role in forest health in the several forest types represented in the IFS project. This chapter gives brief overviews of the situation in eastern spruce-fir, eastern hardwood, and southern pine fores
Authors
A. H. Johnson, A. J. Friedland, E. K. Miller, J. J. Battles, Thomas G. Huntington, D. R. Vann, G. R. Strimbeck

Acid base accounting--An improved method of interpreting overburden chemistry to predict the quality of coal-mine drainage

Acidic mine drainage (AMD), which results from the accelerated oxidation of pyrite (FeS2 ) in mined coal and overburden, has contaminated thousands of miles of streams in the Appalachian region of the United States. Acid‐base accounting (ABA), which simplifies the complex hydrogeochemical system through use of a limited number of variables, commonly is used to predict the post‐mining occurrence of
Authors
Keith Brady, Charles A. Cravotta

Herbicide and nitrate variation in alluvium underlying a cornfield at a site in Iowa County, Iowa

A hydrologic investigation to determine vertical and seasonal variation of atrazine, alachlor, cyanazine, and nitrate at one location and to relate the variation to ground-water movement in the Iowa River alluvium was conducted in Iowa County, Iowa, from March 1986 to December 1987. Water samples were collected at discrete intervals through the alluvial sequence from the soil zone to the base of t
Authors
S. J. Kalkhoff, M.G. Detroy, K. Cherryholmes, R.L. Kuzniar

Oxidation of hydrocarbons coupled to reduction of inorganic species in groundwater

No abstract available.
Authors
Isabelle M. Cozzarelli, Mary Jo Baedecker

The determination and fate of unstable constituents in contaminated ground water

No abstract available.
Authors
Mary Jo Baedecker, Isabelle M. Cozzarelli
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