Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Publications

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

Filter Total Items: 3746

Acetylene as fast food: Implications for development of life on anoxic primordial earth and in the outer solar system

Acetylene occurs, by photolysis of methane, in the atmospheres of jovian planets and Titan. In contrast, acetylene is only a trace component of Earth's current atmosphere. Nonetheless, a methane-rich atmosphere has been hypothesized for early Earth; this atmosphere would also have been rich in acetylene. This poses a paradox, because acetylene is a potent inhibitor of many key anaerobic microbial
Authors
R.S. Oremland, M.A. Voytek

A comparison of winter mercury accumulation at forested and no-canopy sites measured with different snow sampling techniques

Atmospheric mercury (Hg) is delivered to ecosystems via rain, snow, cloud/fog, and dry deposition. The importance of snow, especially snow that has passed through the forest canopy (throughfall), in delivering Hg to terrestrial ecosystems has received little attention in the literature. The snowpack is a dynamic system that links atmospheric deposition and ecosystem cycling through deposition and
Authors
S.J. Nelson, K.B. Johnson, K.C. Weathers, C.S. Loftin, I.J. Fernandez, J. S. Kahl, D. P. Krabbenhoft

Occurrence and turnover of nitric oxide in a nitrogen-impacted sand and gravel aquifer

Little is known about nitric oxide (NO) production or consumption in the subsurface, an environment which may be conducive to NO accumulation. A study conducted in a nitrogen-contaminated aquifer on Cape Cod, Massachusetts assessed the occurrence and turnover of NO within a contaminant plume in which nitrification and denitrification were known to occur. NO (up to 8.6 nM) was detected in restricte
Authors
R. L. Smith, T. Yoshinari

The persistence of lead from past gasoline emissions and mining drainage in a large riparian system: Evidence from lead isotopes in the Sacramento River, California

Lead concentrations and isotope ratios measured in river water colloids and streambed sediment samples along 426 km of the Sacramento River, California reveal that the influence of lead from the historical mining of massive sulfide deposits in the West Shasta Cu-mining district (at the headwaters of the Sacramento River) is confined to a 60 km stretch of river immediately downstream of that mining
Authors
C.E. Dunlap, Charles N. Alpers, R. Bouse, Howard E. Taylor, D.M. Unruh, A.R. Flegal

Sources, transformations, and hydrological processes that control stream nitrate and dissolved organic matter concentrations during snowmelt in an upland forest

We explored catchment processes that control stream nutrient concentrations at an upland forest in northeastern Vermont, USA, where inputs of nitrogen via atmospheric deposition are among the highest in the nation and affect ecosystem functioning. We traced sources of water, nitrate, and dissolved organic matter (DOM) using stream water samples collected at high frequency during spring snowmelt. H
Authors
Stephen D. Sebestyen, Elizabeth W. Boyer, James B. Shanley, Carol Kendall, Daniel H. Doctor, George R. Aiken, Nobuhito Ohte

Multi-residue method for the analysis of 85 current-use and legacy pesticides in bed and suspended sediments

A multi-residue method was developed for the simultaneous determination of 85 current-use and legacy organochlorine pesticides in a single sediment sample. After microwave-assisted extraction, clean-up of samples was optimized using gel permeation chromatography and either stacked carbon and alumina solid-phase extraction cartridges or a deactivated Florisil column. Analytes were determined by gas
Authors
K.L. Smalling, K.M. Kuivila

Wetlands as principal zones of methylmercury production in southern Louisiana and the Gulf of Mexico region

It is widely recognized that wetlands, especially those rich in organic matter and receiving appreciable atmospheric mercury (Hg) inputs, are important sites of methylmercury (MeHg) production. Extensive wetlands in the southeastern United States have many ecosystem attributes ideal for promoting high MeHg production rates; however, relatively few mercury cycling studies have been conducted in the
Authors
B.D. Hall, G. R. Aiken, D. P. Krabbenhoft, M. Marvin-DiPasquale, C.M. Swarzenski

Transport of elemental mercury in the unsaturated zone from a waste disposal site in an arid region

Mercury contained in buried landfill waste may be released via upward emission to the atmosphere or downward leaching to groundwater. Data from the US Geological Survey’s Amargosa Desert Research Site (ADRS) in arid southwestern Nevada reveal another potential pathway of Hg release: long-distance (102 m) lateral migration of elemental Hg (Hg0) through the unsaturated zone. Gas collected from multi
Authors
Michelle Ann Walvoord, Brian J. Andraski, D. P. Krabbenhoft, Robert G. Striegl

Using heat to characterize streambed water flux variability in four stream reaches

Estimates of streambed water flux are needed for the interpretation of streambed chemistry and reactions. Continuous temperature and head monitoring in stream reaches within four agricultural watersheds (Leary Weber Ditch, IN; Maple Creek, NE; DR2 Drain, WA; and Merced River, CA) allowed heat to be used as a tracer to study the temporal and spatial variability of fluxes through the streambed. Syno
Authors
H.I. Essaid, C.M. Zamora, K. A. McCarthy, J. R. Vogel, J.T. Wilson

Subsurface microbial diversity in deep-granitic-fracture water in Colorado

A microbial community analysis using 16S rRNA gene sequencing was performed on borehole water and a granite rock core from Henderson Mine, a >1,000-meter-deep molybdenum mine near Empire, CO. Chemical analysis of borehole water at two separate depths (1,044 m and 1,004 m below the mine entrance) suggests that a sharp chemical gradient exists, likely from the mixing of two distinct subsurface fluid
Authors
J.W. Sahl, R. Schmidt, E.D. Swanner, K.W. Mandernack, A.S. Templeton, Thomas L. Kieft, R. L. Smith, W. E. Sanford, R.L. Callaghan, J.B. Mitton, J.R. Spear

Chromium, chromium isotopes and selected trace elements, western Mojave Desert, USA

Chromium(VI) concentrations in excess of the California Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL) of 50 μg/L occur naturally in alkaline, oxic ground-water in alluvial aquifers in the western Mojave Desert, southern California. The highest concentrations were measured in aquifers eroded from mafic rock, but Cr(VI) as high as 27 μg/L was measured in aquifers eroded from granitic rock. Chromium(VI) concentrat
Authors
J. A. Izbicki, J. W. Ball, T.D. Bullen, S. J. Sutley

Pathogen and chemical transport in the karst limestone of the Biscayne aquifer: 2. Chemical retention from diffusion and slow advection

A tracer experiment, using a nonreactive tracer, was conducted as part of an investigation of the potential for chemical and pathogen migration to public supply wells that draw groundwater from the highly transmissive karst limestone of the Biscayne aquifer in southeastern Florida. The tracer was injected into the formation over approximately 1 h, and its recovery was monitored at a pumping well a
Authors
Allen M. Shapiro, Robert A. Renken, Ronald W. Harvey, Michael R. Zygnerski, David W. Metge