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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

Assessing ground-water vulnerability to contamination: Providing scientifically defensible information for decision makers

Throughout the United States increasing demands for safe drinking water and requirements to maintain healthy ecosystems are leading policy makers to ask complex social and scientific questions about how to assess and manage our water resources. This challenge becomes particularly difficult as policy and management objectives require scientific assessments of the potential for ground-water resource
Authors
Michael J. Focazio, Thomas E. Reilly, Michael G. Rupert, Dennis R. Helsel

Concentrations of pesticides and pesticide degradates in the Croton River Watershed in southeastern New York, July-September 2000

Thirty-seven pesticides and (or) pesticide degradates were detected in baseflow samples collected from 47 stream sites in the Croton River Watershed (374 square miles) in southeastern New York in the summer of 2000. The Croton Reservoir provides about 10 percent of New York City's water supply. Maximum concentrations of most pesticides detected did not exceed 0.1 μg/L (micrograms per liter). This
Authors
Patrick J. Phillips, Robert W. Bode

Simulation of runoff and recharge and estimation of constituent loads in runoff, Edwards aquifer recharge zone (outcrop) and catchment area, Bexar County, Texas, 1997-2000

The U.S. Geological Survey developed a watershed model (Hydrological Simulation Program—FORTRAN) to simulate runoff and recharge and to estimate constituent loads in surface-water runoff in the Edwards aquifer recharge zone (outcrop) and catchment area in Bexar County, Texas. Rainfall and runoff data collected during 1970–98 from four gaged basins in the outcrop and catchment area were used to cal
Authors
Darwin J. Ockerman

Estimating recharge at Yucca Mountain, Nevada, USA: Comparison of methods

Obtaining values of net infiltration, groundwater travel time, and recharge is necessary at the Yucca Mountain site, Nevada, USA, in order to evaluate the expected performance of a potential repository as a containment system for high-level radioactive waste. However, the geologic complexities of this site, its low precipitation and net infiltration, with numerous mechanisms operating simultaneous
Authors
A. L. Flint, L. E. Flint, E. M. Kwicklis, J. T. Fabryka-Martin, G.S. Bodvarsson

Primary modes and predictability of year-to-year snowpack variations in the Western United States from teleconnections with Pacific Ocean climate

Snowpack, as measured on 1 April, is the primary source of warm-season streamflow for most of the western United States and thus represents an important source of water supply. An understanding of climate factors that influence the variability of this water supply and thus its predictability is important for water resource management. In this study, principal component analysis is used to identify
Authors
G.J. McCabe, M. D. Dettinger

The High Plains Aquifer, USA: Groundwater development and sustainability

The High Plains Aquifer, located in the United States, is one of the largest freshwater aquifers in the world and is threatened by continued decline in water levels and deteriorating water quality. Understanding the physical and cultural features of this area is essential to assessing the factors that affect this groundwater resource. About 27% of the irrigated land in the United States overlies t
Authors
K. F. Dennehy, D. W. Litke, P. B. McMahon

Miscellaneous methods for measuring matric or water potential

A variety of techniques to measure matric potential or water potential in the laboratory and in the field are described in this section. The techniques described herein require equilibration of some medium whose matric or water potential can be determined from previous calibration or can be measured directly. Under equilibrium conditions the matric or water potential of the medium is equal to that
Authors
Bridget R. Scanlon, Brian J. Andraski, Jim Bilskie

Thermocouple psychrometry

Thermocouple psychrometry is a technique that infers the water potential of the liquid phase of a sample from measurements within the vapor phase that is in equilibrium with the sample. The theoretical relation between water potential of the liquid phase and relative humidity of the vapor phase is given by the Kelvin equation Ψ = energy/volume = (RT/Vw) ln(p/po) [3.2.3–1]where ψ is water potential
Authors
Brian J. Andraski, Bridget R. Scanlon

Measuring groundwater recharge and discharge using environmental tracers

No abstract available.
Authors
P.G. Cook, John K. Böhlke, D. K. Solomon

Hydrogeologic framework, ground-water geochemistry, and assessment of nitrogen yield from base flow in two agricultural watersheds, Kent County, Maryland

Hydrostratigraphic and geochemical data collected in two adjacent watersheds on the Delmarva Peninsula, in Kent County, Maryland, indicate that shallow subsurface stratigraphy is an important factor that affects the concentrations of nitrogen in ground water discharging as stream base flow. The flux of nitrogen from shallow aquifers can contribute substantially to the eutrophication of streams and
Authors
L. J. Bachman, D.E. Krantz, John K. Böhlke

Methods of analysis by the U.S. Geological Survey National Water Quality Laboratory-A method supplement for the determination of Fipronil and degradates in water by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry

A method for the isolation and detemrination of fipronil and four of its degradates has been developed. This method adapts an analytical method created by the U.S. Geological Survey National Water Quality Laboratory in 1995 for the determination of a broad range of high-use pesticides typically found in filtered natural-water samples. In 2000, fipronil and four of its degradates were extracted,
Authors
James F. Madsen, Mark W. Sandstrom, Steven D. Zaugg
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