Patty Toccalino, Ph.D. (Former Employee)
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 26
Development and Application of Health-Based Screening Levels for Use in Water-Quality Assessments
Health-Based Screening Levels (HBSLs) are non-enforceable water-quality benchmarks that were developed by the U.S. Geological Survey in collaboration with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) and others. HBSLs supplement existing Federal drinking-water standards and guidelines, thereby providing a basis for a more comprehensive evaluation of contaminant-occurrence data in the...
Authors
Patricia L. Toccalino
Occurrence and potential human-health relevance of volatile organic compounds in drinking water from domestic wells in the United States
BackgroundAs the population and demand for safe drinking water from domestic wells increase, it is important to examine water quality and contaminant occurrence. A national assessment in 2006 by the U.S. Geological Survey reported findings for 55 volatile organic compounds (VOCs) based on 2,401 domestic wells sampled during 1985–2002.ObjectivesWe examined the occurrence of individual and...
Authors
Barbara L. Rowe, Patricia Toccalino, Michael J. Moran, John S. Zogorski, Curtis V. Price
Volatile organic compounds in the nation's drinking-water supply wells - what findings may mean to human health
No abstract available.
Authors
Patricia L. Toccalino, Barbara L. Rowe, Julia E. Norman
Volatile organic compounds in the nation's ground water and drinking-water supply wells
This national assessment of 55 volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in ground water gives emphasis to the occurrence of VOCs in aquifers that are used as an important supply of drinking water. In contrast to the monitoring of VOC contamination of ground water at point-source release sites, such as landfills and leaking underground storage tanks (LUSTs), our investigations of aquifers are...
Authors
John S. Zogorski, Janet M. Carter, Tamara Ivahnenko, Wayne W. Lapham, Michael J. Moran, Barbara L. Rowe, Paul J. Squillace, Patricia L. Toccalino
Health-based screening levels to evaluate U.S. Geological Survey ground water quality data
Federal and state drinking‐water standards and guidelines do not exist for many contaminants analyzed by the U.S. Geological Survey's National Water‐Quality Assessment Program, limiting the ability to evaluate the potential human‐health relevance of water‐quality findings. Health‐based screening levels (HBSLs) were developed collaboratively to supplement existing drinking‐water standards...
Authors
Patricia L. Toccalino, Julia E. Norman
Health-Based Screening Levels and their Application to Water-Quality Data
To supplement existing Federal drinking-water standards and guidelines, thereby providing a basis for a more comprehensive evaluation of contaminant-occurrence data in a human-health context, USGS began a collaborative project in 1998 with USEPA, the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, and the Oregon Health & Science University to calculate non-enforceable health-based...
Authors
Patricia L. Toccalino, John S. Zogorski, Julia E. Norman
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 26
Development and Application of Health-Based Screening Levels for Use in Water-Quality Assessments
Health-Based Screening Levels (HBSLs) are non-enforceable water-quality benchmarks that were developed by the U.S. Geological Survey in collaboration with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) and others. HBSLs supplement existing Federal drinking-water standards and guidelines, thereby providing a basis for a more comprehensive evaluation of contaminant-occurrence data in the...
Authors
Patricia L. Toccalino
Occurrence and potential human-health relevance of volatile organic compounds in drinking water from domestic wells in the United States
BackgroundAs the population and demand for safe drinking water from domestic wells increase, it is important to examine water quality and contaminant occurrence. A national assessment in 2006 by the U.S. Geological Survey reported findings for 55 volatile organic compounds (VOCs) based on 2,401 domestic wells sampled during 1985–2002.ObjectivesWe examined the occurrence of individual and...
Authors
Barbara L. Rowe, Patricia Toccalino, Michael J. Moran, John S. Zogorski, Curtis V. Price
Volatile organic compounds in the nation's drinking-water supply wells - what findings may mean to human health
No abstract available.
Authors
Patricia L. Toccalino, Barbara L. Rowe, Julia E. Norman
Volatile organic compounds in the nation's ground water and drinking-water supply wells
This national assessment of 55 volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in ground water gives emphasis to the occurrence of VOCs in aquifers that are used as an important supply of drinking water. In contrast to the monitoring of VOC contamination of ground water at point-source release sites, such as landfills and leaking underground storage tanks (LUSTs), our investigations of aquifers are...
Authors
John S. Zogorski, Janet M. Carter, Tamara Ivahnenko, Wayne W. Lapham, Michael J. Moran, Barbara L. Rowe, Paul J. Squillace, Patricia L. Toccalino
Health-based screening levels to evaluate U.S. Geological Survey ground water quality data
Federal and state drinking‐water standards and guidelines do not exist for many contaminants analyzed by the U.S. Geological Survey's National Water‐Quality Assessment Program, limiting the ability to evaluate the potential human‐health relevance of water‐quality findings. Health‐based screening levels (HBSLs) were developed collaboratively to supplement existing drinking‐water standards...
Authors
Patricia L. Toccalino, Julia E. Norman
Health-Based Screening Levels and their Application to Water-Quality Data
To supplement existing Federal drinking-water standards and guidelines, thereby providing a basis for a more comprehensive evaluation of contaminant-occurrence data in a human-health context, USGS began a collaborative project in 1998 with USEPA, the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, and the Oregon Health & Science University to calculate non-enforceable health-based...
Authors
Patricia L. Toccalino, John S. Zogorski, Julia E. Norman
*Disclaimer: Listing outside positions with professional scientific organizations on this Staff Profile are for informational purposes only and do not constitute an endorsement of those professional scientific organizations or their activities by the USGS, Department of the Interior, or U.S. Government