Publications
The list below includes official USGS publications and journal articles authored by New England Water Science Center scientists. The USGS Pubs Warehouse link provides access to all USSG publications.
Filter Total Items: 1133
Total Phosphorus Loads for Selected Tributaries to Sebago Lake, Maine Total Phosphorus Loads for Selected Tributaries to Sebago Lake, Maine
The streamflow and water-quality datacollection networks of the Portland Water District (PWD) and the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) as of February 2000 were analyzed in terms of their applicability for estimating total phosphorus loads for selected tributaries to Sebago Lake in southern Maine. The long-term unit-area mean annual flows for the Songo River and for small, ungaged...
Authors
Glenn A. Hodgkins
Data Model and Relational Database Design for Highway Runoff Water-Quality Metadata Data Model and Relational Database Design for Highway Runoff Water-Quality Metadata
A National highway and urban runoff waterquality metadatabase was developed by the U.S. Geological Survey in cooperation with the Federal Highway Administration as part of the National Highway Runoff Water-Quality Data and Methodology Synthesis (NDAMS). The database was designed to catalog available literature and to document results of the synthesis in a format that would facilitate...
Authors
Gregory E. Granato, Steven Tessler
Hydrologic data for the Eastland Woolen Mill Superfund Site, Penobscot County, Corinna, Maine, March through June 1999 Hydrologic data for the Eastland Woolen Mill Superfund Site, Penobscot County, Corinna, Maine, March through June 1999
Hydrologic data were collected at the Eastland Woolen Mill Superfund Site, Corinna, Maine, from March 19, 1999 through June 11, 1999 as part of a study to formulate a geologic characterization and conceptual model of this study area. Data-collection consisted of measurements of water-surface elevations at 7 surface-water sites and 20 wells.
Authors
Martha G. Nielsen, Robert W. Dudley, Camille S. Parrish
Composition and Distribution of Streambed Sediments in the Penobscot River, Maine, May 1999 Composition and Distribution of Streambed Sediments in the Penobscot River, Maine, May 1999
Sediment samples were collected and geophysical surveys were run along 50 miles of the Penobscot River, Maine, in the spring of 1999 to produce maps that describe the composition and distribution of streambed sediments for selected areas in the river channel. The objective of the sediment survey was to locate areas along the river where fine-grained, easily transportable sediment types...
Authors
Robert W. Dudley, Sarah E. Giffen
Water resources data-Maine, water year 2001 Water resources data-Maine, water year 2001
The Water Resources Division of the U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with State, Federal, and other local governmental agencies, obtains a large amount of data pertaining to the water resources of Maine each year. These data, accumulated during the many water years, constitute a valuable data base for developing an improved understanding of the water resources of the State. Water...
Authors
G.J. Stewart, J.P. Nielsen, J. M. Caldwell, A.R. Cloutier
Book review: Carbon sequestration in soils: Science monitoring and beyond: Conference proceedings: St. Micheals Workshop, Maryland, December 3–5, 1998, NJ: Rosenberg, N.J. Book review: Carbon sequestration in soils: Science monitoring and beyond: Conference proceedings: St. Micheals Workshop, Maryland, December 3–5, 1998, NJ: Rosenberg, N.J.
No abstract available
Authors
Thomas G. Huntington
Obtaining Streamflow Statistics for Massachusetts Streams on the World Wide Web Obtaining Streamflow Statistics for Massachusetts Streams on the World Wide Web
A World Wide Web application has been developed to make it easy to obtain streamflow statistics for user-selected locations on Massachusetts streams. The Web application, named STREAMSTATS (available at http://water.usgs.gov/osw/streamstats/massachusetts.html ), can provide peak-flow frequency, low-flow frequency, and flow-duration statistics for most streams in Massachusetts. These...
Authors
Kernell G. Ries, Peter A. Steeves, Aleda Freeman, Raj Singh
Distribution of selected volatile organic compounds determined with water-to-vapor diffusion samplers at the interface between ground water and surface water, Centredale Manor site, North Providence, Rhode Island, September 1999 Distribution of selected volatile organic compounds determined with water-to-vapor diffusion samplers at the interface between ground water and surface water, Centredale Manor site, North Providence, Rhode Island, September 1999
Volatile organic compounds are present in soils and ground water at the Centredale Manor Superfund Site in North Providence, Rhode Island. In September 1999, water-to-vapor diffusion samplers were placed in the bottom sediments of waterways adjacent to the site to identify possible contaminated ground-water discharge areas. The approximate12-acre site is a narrow stretch of land between...
Authors
Peter E. Church, Forest P. Lyford, Scott Clifford
Panola Mountain, Georgia: A Water, Energy, and Biogeochemical Budgets Program Site Panola Mountain, Georgia: A Water, Energy, and Biogeochemical Budgets Program Site
The Panola Mountain Research Watershed (PMRW) is a 41-hectare forested watershed in the southern Piedmont physiographic province near Atlanta, Georgia. The watershed contains a naturally regenerated second-growth forest on abandoned agricultural land, typical of the Piedmont. Research at PMRW has focused on how streamflow is generated, and in particular, on how water and solutes move...
Authors
Norman E. Peters, Richard P. Hooper, Thomas G. Huntington, Brent T. Aulenback
Sleepers River, Vermont: a Water, Energy, and Biogeochemical Budgets Program site Sleepers River, Vermont: a Water, Energy, and Biogeochemical Budgets Program site
The Sleepers River Research Watershed in northeastern Vermont was established by the Agricultural Research Service (ARS) of the U.S. Department of Agriculture in 1959 and is now operated jointly by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and the U.S. Army Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory (CRREL), will collaboration from several other Federal Agencies and Universities. The USGS...
Authors
James B. Shanley
The potential for calcium depletion in forest ecosystems of southeastern United States: Review and analysis The potential for calcium depletion in forest ecosystems of southeastern United States: Review and analysis
Biogeochemical mass balance assessments of calcium status in southeastern forests indicate that losses through harvesting and soil leaching often exceed inputs from atmospheric deposition and weathering. Many forest soils of the southeastern United States are particularly sensitive because these soils and the underlying saprolite from which these soils are derived are largely depleted of
Authors
Thomas G. Huntington
Controls on soil respiration: implications for climate change Controls on soil respiration: implications for climate change
No abstract available.
Authors
Lindsey E. Rustad, Thomas G. Huntington, Richard D. Boone