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Publications

Dive into our publications and explore the science from the Environmental Health Program (Toxic Substances Hydrology and Contaminant Biology).

Filter Total Items: 3746

Atmospheric wet deposition of trace elements to a suburban environment, Reston, Virginia, USA

Wet deposition from a suburban area in Reston, Virginia was collected during 1998 and analyzed to assess the anion and trace-element concentrations and depositions. Suburban Reston, approximately 26 km west of Washington, DC, is densely populated and heavily developed. Wet deposition was collected bi-weekly in an automated collector using trace-element clean sampling and analytical techniques. The
Authors
Kathryn M. Conko, Karen C. Rice, Margaret M. Kennedy

Hydrochemical tracers in the middle Rio Grande Basin, USA: 1. Conceptualization of groundwater flow

Chemical and isotopic data for groundwater from throughout the Middle Rio Grande Basin, central New Mexico, USA, were used to identify and map groundwater flow from 12 sources of water to the basin, evaluate radiocarbon ages, and refine the conceptual model of the Santa Fe Group aquifer system.Hydrochemical zones, representing groundwater flow over thousands to tens of thousands of years, can be t
Authors
Niel Plummer, L. M. Bexfield, S. K. Anderholm, W. E. Sanford, E. Busenberg

Degradation of methyl bromide and methyl chloride in soil microcosms: Use of stable C isotope fractionation and stable isotope probing to identify reactions and the responsible microorganisms

Bacteria in soil microcosm experiments oxidized elevated levels of methyl chloride (MeCl) and methyl bromide (MeBr), the former compound more rapidly than the latter. MeBr was also removed by chemical reactions while MeCl was not. Chemical degradation dominated the early removal of MeBr and accounted for more than half of its total loss. Fractionation of stable carbon isotopes during chemical degr
Authors
L.G. Miller, K.L. Warner, S.M. Baesman, R.S. Oremland, I.R. McDonald, S. Radajewski, J.C. Murrell

Spring onset in the Sierra Nevada: When is snowmelt independent of elevation?

Short-term climate and weather systems can have a strong influence on mountain snowmelt, sometimes overwhelming the effects of elevation and aspect. Although most years exhibit a spring onset that starts first at lowest and moves to highest elevations, in spring 2002, flow in a variety of streams within the Tuolumne and Merced River basins of the southern Sierra Nevada all rose synchronously on 29
Authors
J.D. Lundquist, D.R. Cayan, M. D. Dettinger

Fate of volatile organic compounds in constructed wastewater treatment wetlands

The fate of volatile organic compounds was evaluated in a wastewater-dependent constructed wetland near Phoenix, AZ, using field measurements and solute transport modeling. Numerically based volatilization rates were determined using inverse modeling techniques and hydraulic parameters established by sodium bromide tracer experiments. Theoretical volatilization rates were calculated from the two-f
Authors
S.H. Keefe, L. B. Barber, R.L. Runkel, J. N. Ryan

Rare earth element partitioning between hydrous ferric oxides and acid mine water during iron oxidation

Ferrous iron rapidly oxidizes to Fe (III) and precipitates as hydrous Fe (III) oxides in acid mine waters. This study examines the effect of Fe precipitation on the rare earth element(REE) geochemistry of acid mine waters to determine the pH range over which REEs behave conservatively and the range over which attenuation and fractionation occur. Two field studies were designed to investigate REE a
Authors
P. L. Verplanck, D. Kirk Nordstrom, Howard E. Taylor, B. A. Kimball

Biotransformation of tributyltin to tin in freshwater river-bed sediments contaminated by an organotin release

The largest documented release of organotin compounds to a freshwater river system in the United States occurred in early 2000 in central South Carolina. The release consisted of an unknown volume of various organotin compounds such tetrabutyltin (TTBT), tributyltin (TBT), tetraoctyltin (TTOT), and trioctyl tin (TOT) and resulted in a massive fish kill and the permanent closures of a municipal was
Authors
J. E. Landmeyer, T.L. Tanner, B.E. Watt

Surface complexation model of uranyl sorption on Georgia kaolinite

The adsorption of uranyl on standard Georgia kaolinites (KGa-1 and KGa-1B) was studied as a function of pH (3–10), total U (1 and 10 μmol/l), and mass loading of clay (4 and 40 g/l). The uptake of uranyl in air-equilibrated systems increased with pH and reached a maximum in the near-neutral pH range. At higher pH values, the sorption decreased due to the presence of aqueous uranyl carbonate comple
Authors
T.E. Payne, J.A. Davis, G.R. Lumpkin, R. Chisari, T.D. Waite

Structural and spectral features of selenium nanospheres produced by Se-respiring bacteria

Certain anaerobic bacteria respire toxic selenium oxyanions and in doing so produce extracellular accumulations of elemental selenium [Se(0)]. We examined three physiologically and phylogenetically diverse species of selenate- and selenite-respiring bacteria, Sulfurospirillum barnesii, Bacillus selenitireducens, and Selenihalanaerobacter shriftii, for the occurrence of this phenomenon. When grown
Authors
R.S. Oremland, M.J. Herbel, J.S. Blum, S. Langley, T.J. Beveridge, P.M. Ajayan, T. Sutto, A.V. Ellis, S. Curran

Characterization and origin of polar dissolved organic matter from the Great Salt Lake

Polar dissolved organic matter (DOM) was isolated from a surface-water sample from the Great Salt Lake by separating it from colloidal organic matter by membrane dialysis, from less-polar DOM fractions by resin sorbents, and from inorganic salts by a combination of sodium cation exchange followed by precipitation of sodium salts by acetic acid during evaporative concentration. Polar DOM was the mo
Authors
J. A. Leenheer, T.I. Noyes, C.E. Rostad, M.L. Davisson

A biogeochemical comparison of two well-buffered catchments with contrasting histories of acid deposition

Much of the biogeochemical cycling research in catchments in the past 25 years has been driven by acid deposition research funding. This research has focused on vulnerable base-poor systems; catchments on alkaline lithologies have received little attention. In regions of high acid loadings, however, even well-buffered catchments are susceptible to forest decline and episodes of low alkalinity in s
Authors
J. B. Shanley, P. Kram, J. Hruska, T.D. Bullen

Effects of dissolved carbonate on arsenate adsorption and surface speciation at the hematite-water interface

Effects of dissolved carbonate on arsenate [As(V)] reactivity and surface speciation at the hematite−water interface were studied as a function of pH and two different partial pressures of carbon dioxide gas [PCO2 = 10-3.5 atm and ∼0; CO2-free argon (Ar)] using adsorption kinetics, pseudo-equilibrium adsorption/titration experiments, extended X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopic (EXAFS) a
Authors
Y. Arai, D.L. Sparks, J.A. Davis