Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Publications

New York Water Science Center publications

►To fine-tune a search for USGS publications, try the USGS Publications Warehouse.

Filter Total Items: 722

Influence of dietary carbon on mercury bioaccumulation in streams of the Adirondack Mountains of New York and the Coastal Plain of South Carolina, USA Influence of dietary carbon on mercury bioaccumulation in streams of the Adirondack Mountains of New York and the Coastal Plain of South Carolina, USA

We studied lower food webs in streams of two mercury-sensitive regions to determine whether variations in consumer foraging strategy and resultant dietary carbon signatures accounted for observed within-site and among-site variations in consumer mercury concentration. We collected macroinvertebrates (primary consumers and predators) and selected forage fishes from three sites in the...
Authors
Karen Riva-Murray, Paul M. Bradley, Lia C. Chasar, Daniel T. Button, Mark E. Brigham, Barbara C. Scudder Eikenberry, Celeste A. Journey, Michelle A. Lutz

Preliminary assessment of water chemistry related to groundwater flooding in Wawarsing, New York, 2009-11 Preliminary assessment of water chemistry related to groundwater flooding in Wawarsing, New York, 2009-11

Water-quality samples collected in an area prone to groundwater flooding in Wawarsing, New York, were analyzed and assessed to better understand the hydrologic system and to aid in the assessment of contributing water sources. Above average rainfall over the past decade, and the presence of a pressurized water tunnel that passes about 700 feet beneath Wawarsing, could both contribute to
Authors
Craig J. Brown, David A. Eckhardt, Frederick Stumm, Anthony Chu

An assessment of radon in groundwater in New York State An assessment of radon in groundwater in New York State

Abstract: A set of 317 samples collected from wells throughout New York State (excluding Long Island) from 2003 through 2008 was used to assess the distribution of radon gas in drinking water. Previous studies have documented high concentrations of radon in groundwater from granitic and metamorphic bedrock, but there have been only limited characterizations of radon in water from...
Authors
Stephen B. Shaw, David A.V. Eckhardt

Specific conductance measurements in central and western New York streams - A retrospective characterization Specific conductance measurements in central and western New York streams - A retrospective characterization

U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Data Rescue Program funds were used to recover data from paper records for 139 streamgages across central and western New York State; 6,133 different streamflow measurement forms, collected between 1970-80, contained field water-quality measurements. The water-quality data were entered, reviewed, and uploaded into the USGS National Water Information System...
Authors
William M. Kappel, Gaylen J. Sinclair, James E. Reddy, David A. Eckhardt, M. Peter deVries, Margaret E. Phillips

Dissolved methane in New York groundwater, 1999-2011 Dissolved methane in New York groundwater, 1999-2011

New York State is underlain by numerous bedrock formations of Cambrian to Devonian age that produce natural gas and to a lesser extent oil. The first commercial gas well in the United States was dug in the early 1820s in Fredonia, south of Buffalo, New York, and produced methane from Devonian-age black shale. Methane naturally discharges to the land surface at some locations in New York...
Authors
William M. Kappel, Elizabeth A. Nystrom

Baseline groundwater quality in national park units within the Marcellus and Utica Shale gas plays, New York, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia, 2011 Baseline groundwater quality in national park units within the Marcellus and Utica Shale gas plays, New York, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia, 2011

Groundwater samples were collected from 15 production wells and 1 spring at 9 national park units in New York, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia in July and August 2011 and analyzed to characterize the quality of these water supplies. The sample sites generally were selected to represent areas of potential effects on water quality by drilling and development of gas wells in Marcellus Shale...
Authors
David A.V. Eckhardt, Ronald A. Sloto

Hydrogeology of the stratified-drift aquifers in the Cayuta Creek and Catatonk Creek valleys in parts of Tompkins, Schuyler, Chemung, and Tioga Counties, New York Hydrogeology of the stratified-drift aquifers in the Cayuta Creek and Catatonk Creek valleys in parts of Tompkins, Schuyler, Chemung, and Tioga Counties, New York

The surficial deposits, areal extent of aquifers, and the water-table configurations of the stratified-drift aquifer systems in the Cayuta Creek and Catatonk Creek valleys and their large tributary valleys in Tompkins, Schuyler, Chemung, and Tioga Counties, New York were mapped in 2009, in cooperation with the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation. Well and test-boring...
Authors
Todd S. Miller, Lacey M. Pitman

Simulated flow of groundwater and brine from a flooded salt mine in Livingston County, New York, and effects of remedial pumping on an overlying aquifer Simulated flow of groundwater and brine from a flooded salt mine in Livingston County, New York, and effects of remedial pumping on an overlying aquifer

Two ceiling collapses in the Retsof salt mine near Geneseo in upstate New York in spring 1994 resulted in the upward propagation of two columns of rubble through 600 feet of overlying shale and carbonate bedrock. This upward propagation formed a hydraulic connection between the lower confined aquifer (LCA) and the mine and allowed water from the aquifer and bedrock fracture zones that...
Authors
Richard M. Yager, Todd S. Miller, William M. Kappel, Paul E. Misut, Christian D. Langevin, David L. Parkhurst, M. Peter deVries

Groundwater quality in the Genesee River Basin, New York, 2010 Groundwater quality in the Genesee River Basin, New York, 2010

Water samples collected from eight production wells and eight private residential wells in the Genesee River Basin from September through December 2010 were analyzed to characterize the groundwater quality in the basin. Eight of the wells were completed in sand and gravel aquifers, and eight were finished in bedrock aquifers. Three of the 16 wells were sampled in the first Genesee River...
Authors
James E. Reddy

Natural-channel-design restorations that changed geomorphology have little effect on macroinvertebrate communities in headwater streams Natural-channel-design restorations that changed geomorphology have little effect on macroinvertebrate communities in headwater streams

Stream restorations that increase geomorphic stability can improve habitat quality, which should benefit selected species and local aquatic ecosystems. This assumption is often used to define primary restoration goals; yet, biological responses to restoration are rarely monitored or evaluated methodically. Macroinvertebrate communities were inventoried at 6 study reaches within 5...
Authors
Anne G. Ernst, Dana R. Warren, Barry P. Baldigo

Combined sewer overflows: an environmental source of hormones and wastewater micropollutants Combined sewer overflows: an environmental source of hormones and wastewater micropollutants

Data were collected at a wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) in Burlington, Vermont, USA, (serving 30,000 people) to assess the relative contribution of CSO (combined sewer overflow) bypass flows and treated wastewater effluent to the load of steroid hormones and other wastewater micropollutants (WMPs) from a WWTP to a lake. Flow-weighted composite samples were collected over a 13 month...
Authors
P. J. Phillips, A.T. Chalmers, J.L. Gray, D.W. Kolpin, W.T. Foreman, G. R. Wall

Changes in faunal and vegetation communities along a soil calcium gradient in northern hardwood forests Changes in faunal and vegetation communities along a soil calcium gradient in northern hardwood forests

Depletion of Ca from forest soils due to acidic deposition has had potentially pervasive effects on forest communities, but these impacts remain largely unknown. Because snails, salamanders, and plants play essential roles in the Ca cycle of northern hardwood forests, we hypothesized that their community diversity, abundance, and structure would vary with differences in biotic Ca...
Authors
Colin M. Beier, Anne M. Woods, Kenneth P. Hotopp, James P. Gibbs, Myron J. Mitchell, Martin Dovciak, Donald J. Leopold, Gregory B. Lawrence, Blair D. Page
Was this page helpful?