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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 assessment of the eastern Iowa basins: Data, September 1995 through September 1996

The U.S. Geological Survey began data-collection activities in the Eastern Iowa Basins study unit of the National Water-Quality Assessment Program in September 1995 with the purpose of determining the status and trends in water quality. Surface-water data were collected, beginning in March 1996, on a monthly basis with occasional extra high- and low-flow samples. Data collected from 12 sites on ri
Authors
Kimberlee K.B. Akers, Douglas J. Schnoebelen, Mark E. Savoca, Linda R. Roberts, Kent Becher

Water-quality and lake-stage data for Wisconsin lakes, water year 1998

The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), in cooperation with local and other agencies, collects data at selected lakes throughout Wisconsin. These data, accumulated over many years, provide a data base for developing an improved understanding of the water quality of lakes. To make these data available to interested parties outside the USGS, the data are published annually in this report series. The loca
Authors
Dale M. Robertson, J. F. Elder, H.S. Garn, G. L. Goddard, S.B. Marsh, D.L. Olson, W. J. Rose

Freshwater use in Delaware, 1995

No abstract available.
Authors
Judith C. Wheeler

Sustainability of ground-water resources

The pumpage of fresh ground water in the United States in 1995 was estimated to be approximately 77 billion gallons per day (Solley and others, 1998), which is about 8 percent of the estimated 1 trillion gallons per day of natural recharge to the Nation's ground-water systems (Nace, 1960). From an overall national perspective, the ground-water resource appears ample. Locally, however, the availabi
Authors
William M. Alley, Thomas E. Reilly, O. Lehn Franke

Pennsylvania

No abstract available
Authors

Deep Aquifer Remediation Tools (DARTs): A new technology for ground-water remediation

Potable ground-water supplies throughout the world are contaminated or threatened by advancing plumes containing radionuclides, metals, and organic compounds. Currently (1999), the most widely used method of ground-water remediation is a combination of extraction, ex-situ treatment, and discharge of the treated water, commonly known as pump and treat. Pump-and-treat methods are costly and often in
Authors
David L. Naftz, James A. Davis

The Washington and Oregon mid-shelf silt deposit and its relation to the late Holocene Columbia River sediment budget

The purpose of this report is to compile and analyze existing data which lend support to the development of a sediment budget for the Columbia River, coastal, and offshore regions of southwest Washington. This will contribute to the construction of a sediment budget model which will reflect sediment sources, depocenters, and the sediment contribution to each region. The Columbia River is the sourc
Authors
Stephen C. Wolf, Hans Nelson, Michael R. Hamer, Gita Dunhill, R. Lawrence Phillips

Simulation of the effects of operating lakes Mendota, Monona, and Waubesa, south-central Wisconsin, as multipurpose reservoirs to maintain dry-weather flow

A digital reservoir routing model was used to simulate the operation of Lakes Mendota, Monona, and Waubesa, south-central Wisconsin for various levels of minimum release. Twenty-five years of record (1970?94) were used in model simulation. The amount of water available to maintain streamflow and lake levels during dry periods has declined because of extensive pumping of ground water for municipal
Authors
W. R. Krug

Digital data used to relate nutrient inputs to water quality in the Chesapeake Bay watershed

Digital data sets were compiled by the U. S. Geological Survey (USGS) and used as input for a collection of Spatially Referenced Regressions On Watershed attributes for the Chesapeake Bay region. These regressions relate streamwater loads to nutrient sources and the factors that affect the transport of these nutrients throughout the watershed. A digital segmented network based on watershed boundar
Authors
John W. Brakebill, Stephen D. Preston
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