Publications
Dive into our publications and explore the science from the Environmental Health Program (Toxic Substances Hydrology and Contaminant Biology).
Filter Total Items: 3784
Phytoplankton community ecology: Principles applied in San Francisco Bay
In his seminal 1961 paper 'The paradox of the plankton' Am Nat 95:137-147, G. E. Hutchinson asked why many species of phytoplankton can coexist while competing for a small number of limiting resources in an unstructured habitat. Hutchinson anticipated the resolution of his paradox, recognizing that communities are organized by processes beyond resource competition including species...
Authors
James Cloern, R. Dufford
Heat as a tracer to estimate dissolved organic carbon flux from a restored wetland
Heat was used as a natural tracer to characterize shallow ground water flow beneath a complex wetland system. Hydrogeologic data were combined with measured vertical temperature profiles to constrain a series of two‐dimensional, transient simulations of ground water flow and heat transport using the model code SUTRA (Voss 1990). The measured seasonal temperature signal reached depths of...
Authors
Karen R. Burow, J. Constantz, R. Fujii
Ecohydrological control of deep drainage in arid and semiarid regions
The amount and spatial distribution of deep drainage (downward movement of water across the bottom of the root zone) and groundwater recharge affect the quantity and quality of increasingly limited groundwater in arid and semiarid regions. We synthesize research from the fields of ecology and hydrology to address the issue of deep drainage in arid and semiarid regions. We start with a...
Authors
M.S. Seyfried, S. Schwinning, Michelle Ann Walvoord, William T. Pockman, B.D. Newman, R.B. Jackson, F. M. Phillips
Diel behavior of rare earth elements in a mountain stream with acidic to neutral pH
Diel (24-h) changes in concentrations of rare earth elements (REE) were investigated in Fisher Creek, a mountain stream in Montana that receives acid mine drainage in its headwaters. Three simultaneous 24-h samplings were conducted at an upstream station (pH = 3.3), an intermediate station (pH = 5.5), and a downstream station (pH = 6.8). The REE were found to behave conservatively at the...
Authors
Christopher H. Gammons, S.A. Wood, David Nimick
Herbicides and degradates in shallow aquifers of Illinois: Spatial and temporal trends
During the fall of 2000, the occurrence was examined of 16 herbicides and 13 herbicide degradates in samples from 55 wells in shallow aquifers underlying grain producing regions of Illinois. Herbicide compounds with concentrations above 0.05 μg/L were detected in 56 percent of the samples. No concentrations exceeded regulatory drinking water standards. The six most frequently detected...
Authors
P.C. Mills, D.W. Kolpin, E.A. Scribner, E. Michael Thurman
Nitrogen and carbon flow from rock to water: Regulation through soil biogeochemical processes, Mokelumne River watershed, California, and Grand Valley, Colorado
Soil denitrification is an ecologically important nitrogen removal mechanism that releases to the atmosphere the greenhouse gas N2O, an intermediate product from the reduction of NO3- to N 2. In this study we evaluate the relationship between soil carbon and denitrification potential in watersheds with bedrock acting as a nonpoint source of nitrogen, testing the hypothesis that nitrate...
Authors
JoAnn M. Holloway, R. S. U. Smith
Combined use of borehole geophysics and packers to site potable wells in a contaminated area in Montville, Connecticut
A leaking underground gasoline tank contaminated a crystalline bedrock aquifer in Montville, Connecticut, USA with MTBE and benzene. At the original residential bedrock supply wells, the median MTBE concentration was 165 micrograms per liter (mg/L), and the median benzene concentration was 320 mg/L. The maximum concentrations of MTBE and benzene were 4,300 mg/l and 1,700 mg/L...
Authors
A. Rice Green, John W. Lane, Carole D. Johnson, John H. Williams, Remo A. Mondazzi, Peter K. Joesten
Time-series monitoring in fractured-rock aquifers
Time-lapse monitoring of subsurface processes is an emerging and promising area of hydrogeophysics. The combined use of non-invasive or minimally invasive geophysical methods with hydraulic and geochemical sampling is a cost-effective approach for aquifer characterization, long-term aquifer monitoring, and remediation monitoring. Time-lapse geophysical surveys can indirectly measure time...
Authors
Carole D. Johnson, John W. Lane, Frederick D. Day-Lewis
Comment on “Probabilistic risk analysis for a high-level radioactive waste repository” by B. L. Cohen in risk analysis, volume 23, 909–915
No abstract available.
Authors
R.C. Ewing, C.S. Palenik, Leonard F. Konikow
Hydrogeology Journal in 2004
Hydrogeology Journal continues to flourish. The increase in the size of our yearly volume attests to the success and growing international reputation of the journal. Until 2001, HJ produced about 600 printed pages each year. This number has steadily increased, and in 2005 and 2006, HJ will be allocated 800 pages per year by the publisher. Despite this good news, the journal is having...
Authors
Clifford I. Voss, Perry G. Olcott, Robert Schneider, Christine Watson
Effects of aquifer travel time on nitrogen transport to a coastal embayment
Effects of aquifer travel time on nitrogen reaction and loading to Popponesset Bay, a eutrophic coastal embayment on western Cape Cod, Massachusetts, are evaluated through hydrologic analysis of flow and transport. Approximately 10% of the total nitrogen load to the embayment is intercepted by fresh water ponds and delivered to the coast by connecting streams. For the nitrogen load not...
Authors
John A. Colman, John P. Masterson, Wendy J. Pabich, Donald A. Walter