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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: 18493

U.S. Geological Survey research on surrogate measurements for suspended sediment

The U.S. Geological Survey is evaluating potentially useful surrogate instruments and methods for inferring the physical characteristics of suspended sediments. Instruments operating on bulk acoustic, bulk and digital optic, laser, and pressure-differential technologies are being tested in riverine and laboratory settings for their usefulness to Federal agencies toward providing quantifiably relia
Authors
John R. Gray, Theodore S. Melis, Eduardo Patiño, Matthew C. Larsen, David J. Topping, Patrick P. Rasmussen, Carlos Figueroa-Alamo

A proposed international watershed research network

An “International Watershed Research Network” is to be an initial project of the Sino-U. S. Centers for Soil and Water Conservation and Environmental Protection. The Network will provide a fundamental database for research personnel of the Centers, as well as of the global research community, and is viewed as an important resource for their successful operation. Efforts are under way to (a) identi
Authors
W. R. Osterkamp, J. R. Gray

Recent progress in the development of a SPARROW model of sediment for the conterminous U.S.

Suspended sediment has long been recognized as an important contaminant affecting water resources. Besides its direct role in determining water clarity, bridge scour and reservoir storage, sediment serves as a vehicle for the transport of many binding contaminants, including nutrients, trace metals, semi- volatile organic compounds, and numerous pesticides (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency 200
Authors
Gregory Schwarz, Richard Smith, Richard Alexander, John Gray

Hazard mitigation related to water and sediment fluxes in the Yellow River basin, China, based on comparable basins of the United States

The Yellow River, north-central China, and comparative rivers of the western United States, the Rio Grande and the Colorado River, derive much of their flows from melting snow at high elevations, but derive most of their se diment loads from semiarid central parts of the basins. The three rivers are regulated by larg e reservoirs that store water and sediment, causing downstream channel scour and,
Authors
W. R. Osterkamp, J. R. Gray

Evaluation of sediment-surrogate technologies for computation of suspended-sediment transport

No abstract available.
Authors
John R. Gray, Eduardo Patiño, Patrick P. Rasmussen, Matthew C. Larsen, Theodore S. Melis, David J. Topping, Michael S. Runner, Carlos Figueroa Alamo

A 2,000-mile partnership with the USGS, Kayaks down the Yukon

Early in 2001, Bill Barber and Jay Klinck, avid kayakers and scientists, began planning a northern expedition that would take them across more than 2,000 miles of mostly untamed wilderness along the Yukon River. At the same time, USGS scientists were making plans to study the last, unregulated great river in North America, spanning one of the largest and most diverse ecosystems in the world. Soon,
Authors
Peter Schuster, M. Reddy

Water Resources Data: Hawaii and Other Pacific Areas, Water Year 2002. Volume 1. Hawaii

Water resources data for the 2002 water year for Hawaii consist of records of stage, discharge, and water quality of streams and springs; water levels and quality of water wells; and rainfall totals. * Water discharge for 71 gaging stations on streams, springs, and ditches. * Discharge data for 93 crest-stage partial-record stations. * Water-quality data for 5 streams, 28 partial-record stati
Authors
M.F. Wong, D.C. Nishimoto, P.C. Teeters, R.I. Taogoshi

Geohydrology of the Valley-Fill aquifer in the Norwich-Oxford-Brisben area, Chenango County, New York

This set of maps and geohydrologic sections depicts the geology and hydrology of aquifers in the 21.9-square-mile reach of the Chenango River valley between Brisben and North Norwich, N.Y. This report depicts the principal geographic features of the study area; locations of domestic, commercial, and municipal wells from which data were obtained to construct water-table and saturated-thickness maps
Authors
Kari K. Hetcher, Todd S. Miller, James D. Garry, Richard J. Reynolds

Topography and Sedimentation Characteristics of the Squaw Creek National Wildlife Refuge, Holt County, Missouri, 1937-2002

The Squaw Creek National Wildlife Refuge (hereafter referred to as the Refuge), located on the Missouri River floodplain in northwest Missouri, was established in 1935 to provide habitat for migratory birds and wildlife. Results of 1937 and 1964 topographic surveys indicate that sedimenta-tion, primarily from Squaw Creek and Davis Creek inflows, had substantially reduced Refuge pool volumes and de
Authors
David C. Heimann, Joseph M. Richards

Hydrogeology of the Tully Trough, southern Onondaga County and northern Cortland County, New York

A trough valley near Tully, N.Y. was formed by the same glacial processes that formed the Finger Lake valleys to the west. Glacial ice eroded a preglacial bedrock divide along the northern rim of the Allegheny Plateau and deepened a preglacial valley to form a trough valley. Subsequent meltwater issuing from the ice transported and deposited large amounts of sediment which partly filled the trough
Authors
William M. Kappel, Todd S. Miller
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