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New York Water Science Center publications

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Filter Total Items: 715

Simulation of ground-water flow and pumpage in Kings and Queens Counties, Long Island, New York Simulation of ground-water flow and pumpage in Kings and Queens Counties, Long Island, New York

The potential effects of using ground water as a supplemental source of supply in Kings and Queens Counties were evaluated through a 4-layer finite-difference ground-water-flow model with a uniform grid spacing of 1,333 feet. Hydraulic properties and boundary conditions of an existing regional ground-water-flow model of Long Island with a uniform grid spacing of 4,000 feet were refined...
Authors
Paul E. Misut, Jack Monti

Thickness of unconsolidated deposits in the towns of Solon and Taylor, Cortland County, New York Thickness of unconsolidated deposits in the towns of Solon and Taylor, Cortland County, New York

Introduction Siting of waste-disposal facilities in Cortland County poses a potential threat to local ground-water resources. An especially sensitive waste-disposal siting issue arose in 1988, when the New York State Low-Level Radioactive Waste Siting Commission (NYSLLWSC) identified 15 sites in six towns (Towns of Solon, Taylor, Freetown, Cincinnatus, Marathon, and Willet) in the...
Authors
Todd S. Miller

Hydrogeology of the Schodack-Kinderhook Area, Rensselaer and Columbia Counties, New York Hydrogeology of the Schodack-Kinderhook Area, Rensselaer and Columbia Counties, New York

Two glaciodeltaic outwash terraces in southern Rensselaer and northern Columbia Counties, known locally as the Schodack and Kinderhook terraces, consist of ice-contact and outwash sand and gravel and together form a regional, unconfined, stratified-drift aquifer with a combined area of 18.75 square miles. The hydrogeology of these aquifers is summarized on four maps at 1:24,000 scale...
Authors
Richard J. Reynolds

Water resources of the Batavia Kill basin at Windham, Greene County, New York Water resources of the Batavia Kill basin at Windham, Greene County, New York

The water resources of a 27.6-square-mile section of the Batavia Kill Basin near the village of Windham, N.Y., which has undergone substantial development, were evaluated. The evaluation entailed (1) estimation of the magnitude and distribution of several hydrologic components, including recharge, (2) measurement of discharge and chemical quality of the Batavia Kill and selected...
Authors
Paul M. Heisig

Iron in the aquifer system of Suffolk County, New York, 1990-98 Iron in the aquifer system of Suffolk County, New York, 1990-98

High concentrations of dissolved iron in ground water contribute to the biofouling of public-supply wells, and the treatment and remediation of biofouling are costly. Water companies on Long Island, N.Y., spend several million dollars annually to recondition, redevelop, and replace supply wells and distribution lines; treat dissolved iron with sequestering agents or by filtration; and...
Authors
Craig J. Brown, Donald A. Walter, Steven Colabufo

The Midwestern Basins and Arches regional aquifer system in parts of Indiana, Ohio, Michigan, and Illinois — Summary The Midwestern Basins and Arches regional aquifer system in parts of Indiana, Ohio, Michigan, and Illinois — Summary

The Midwestern Basins and Arches aquifer system is composed of surficial deposits of Pleistocene and Holocene age and of Silurian and Devonian age carbonate rock in parts of Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, and Ohio. The study area encompasses a complex of structural arches--the Cincinnati, Findlay, and Kankakee arches--and it is bounded on the east, north, and west by the Appalachian...
Authors
Edward F. Bugliosi

Simulation of freshwater-saltwater interfaces in the Brooklyn-Queens aquifer system, Long Island, New York Simulation of freshwater-saltwater interfaces in the Brooklyn-Queens aquifer system, Long Island, New York

The seaward limit of the fresh ground-water system underlying Kings and Queens Counties on Long Island, N.Y., is at the freshwater-saltwater transition zone. This zone has been conceptualized in transient-state, three-dimensional models of the aquifer system as a sharp interface between freshwater and saltwater, and represented as a stationary, zero lateral-flow boundary. In this study...
Authors
Angelo L. Kontis

A precipitation-runoff model for part of the Ninemile Creek watershed near Camillus, Onondaga County, New York A precipitation-runoff model for part of the Ninemile Creek watershed near Camillus, Onondaga County, New York

A precipitation-runoff model, HSPF (Hydrologic Simulation Program Fortran), of a 41.7 square mile part of the Ninemile Creek watershed near Camillus, in central New York, was developed and calibrated to predict the hydrological effects of future suburban development on streamflow, and the effects of stormwater detention on flooding of Ninemile Creek at Camillus. Development was...
Authors
Phillip J. Zarriello

Effects of a beaver pond on runoff processes: comparison of two headwater catchments Effects of a beaver pond on runoff processes: comparison of two headwater catchments

Natural variations in concentrations of 18O, D, and H4SiO4 in two tributary catchments of Woods Lake in the west-central Adirondack Mountains of New York were measured during 1989–1991 to examine runoff processes and their implications for the neutralization of acidic precipitation by calcium carbonate treatment. The two catchments are similar except that one contained a 1.3 ha beaver...
Authors
Douglas A. Burns, Jeffery J. McDonnell
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