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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: 18426

Effect of sediment depth and sediment type on the survival of Vallisneria americana Michx grown from tubers

Sedimentation resulting from storms may have been one of the reasons for the elimination of submersed aquatic vegetation from the tidal Potomac River in the late 1930's. Laboratory studies were conducted to investigate the effects of different depths of overlying sediment and composition of sediment on the survival of Vallisneria americana Michx (wildcelery) grown from tubers. Survival of plants g
Authors
Nancy B. Rybicki, Virginia Carter

The modification of an estuary

The San Francisco Bay estuary has been rapidly modified by human activity. Diking and filling of most of its wetlands have eliminated habitats for fish and waterfowl; the introduction of exotic species has transformed the composition of its aquatic communities; reduction of freshwater inflow by more than half has changed the dynamics of its plant and animal communities; and wastes have contaminate
Authors
F.H. Nichols, James E. Cloern, Samuel N. Luoma, D.H. Peterson

Snow chemistry of the Cascade-Sierra Nevada Mountains

This investigation assesses geographic variations in atmospheric deposition in Washington, Oregon, and California using snow cores from the Cascade-Sierra Nevada Mountains, collected from late February to mid-March 1983. A statistical analysis of the analytical and sampling precision was made. The snowpack in the higher Cascades and Sierra Nevada is not strongly influenced by anthropogenic activit
Authors
L.B. Laird, Howard E. Taylor, V. C. Kennedy

Finite-difference grid for a doublet well in an anisotropic aquifer

The U.S. Geological Survey is modeling hydraulic flow and thermal-energy transport at a two-well injection/ withdrawal system in St. Paul, Minnesota. The design of the finite-difference model grid for the doublet-well system is complicated because the aquifer is anisotropic and the principal axes of transmissivity are not aligned with the axis between the two wells. An analytical solution for flow
Authors
R. T. Miller, C.I. Voss

Biomass and productivity of three phytoplankton size classes in San Francisco Bay

The 5-22 mu m size accounted for 40-50% of annual production in each embayment, but production by phytoplanton >22 mu m ranged from 26% in the S reach to 54% of total phytoplankton production in the landward embayment of the N reach. A productivity index is derived that predicts daily productivity for each size class as a function of ambient irradiance and integrated chlorophyll a in the photic zo
Authors
B.E. Cole, J. E. Cloern, A.E. Alpine

A fan dam for Tulare Lake, California, and implications for the Wisconsin glacial history of the Sierra Nevada

Historic fluctuations and late Quaternary deposits of Tulare Lake, in the southern San Joaquin Valley, indicate that maximum lake size has depended chiefly on the height of a frequently overtopped spillway. This dependence gives Tulare Lake a double record of paleoclimate. Climate in the Tulare Lake region has influenced the degree to which the lake fills its basin during dry seasons and dry years
Authors
B.F. Atwater

Isolation and detection of Giardia cysts from water using direct immunofluorescence

A water‐sampling apparatus used for the isolation and detection of Giardiacysts in water has been designed and tested. The sampling apparatus uses one of a variety of pumps or waterline pressure to move water through a filter. Two of the optional pumps are lightweight enough to make the apparatus portable and thus suitable for sampling in remote areas. This technique of sample processing produces
Authors
Stephen K. Sorenson, John L. Riggs, Peter D. Dileanis, Thomas J. Suk

Water resources data, New Mexico, water year 1985

Water resources data for the 1985 water year for New Mexico consist of records of discharge and water quality of streams; stage, contents and water quality of lakes and reservoirs; and water levels and water quality in wells and springs. This report contains discharge records for 168 gaging stations; stage and contents for 25 lakes and reservoirs; water quality for 65 gaging stations and 179 wells
Authors
Louis P. Denis, Linda V. Beal, Harriet R. Allen

Water resources data, North Dakota, water year 1985

No abstract available. 
Authors
R.E. Harkness, N.D. Haffield, G.L. Ryan

Water resources data Iowa, water year 1985

Water resources data for the 1985 water year for Iowa consist of records of stage, discharge, and water quality of streams; stage, contents, and water quality of lakes and reservoirs; ground-water levels and ground-water quality. This report contains discharge records for 111 stream-gaging stations; stage and contents for 8 lakes and reservoirs; water quality for 8 stream-gaging stations; sediment
Authors
N.B. Melcher, M.G. Detroy, W.J. Matthes, R.E. Hansen