Publications
South Atlantic Water Science Center scientists have produced over 1,300 publications that are registered in the USGS Publications Warehouse, along with many others prior to their work at the USGS or in conjunction with other government agencies. Journal articles and conference proceedings are also available.
Filter Total Items: 1551
Water quality of the Neuse River, North Carolina: Variability, pollution loads, and long-term trends
A water-quality study of the Neuse River, N.C., based on data collected during 1956-77 at the U.S. Geological Survey stations at Clayton and Kinston, employs statistical trend analysis techniques that provide a framework for river quality assessment. Overall, water-quality of the Neuse River is satisfactory for most uses. At Clayton, fecal coliform bacteria and nutrient levels are high, but algae
Authors
Douglas A. Harned
Ground-water data for Georgia, 1979
This report continues a publication format that annually presents both water-level and water-quality data. In this format the information is presented in two-page units: the left page presents a text which summarizes the information for an area or subject and the right page consists of one or more illustrations. Daily mean water-level fluctuations and trends are shown in hydrographs for the previo
Authors
S.E. Matthews, W.G. Hester, M. P. O'Byrne
Kelly Barnes Dam flood of November 6, 1977, near Toccoa, Georgia
No abstract available.
Authors
C.L. Sanders, Vernon B. Sauer
Better utilization of ground water in the Piedmont and mountain region of the southeast
The development of water supplies for domestic consumption, and for those commercial and industrial uses requiring relatively pure water, has followed a pattern in the Piedmont and mountain areas of the southeast similar to that in most other humid areas. The first settlers utilized seepage springs on hillsides. Such springs occur along steep slopes where the water table intersects the land surfac
Authors
Ralph C. Heath
Geohydrology of Bartow, Cherokee, and Forsyth Counties, Georgia
No abstract available.
Authors
Charles W. Cressler, H.E. Blanchard
The effect of nitrification in the oxygen balance of the Upper Chattahoochee River, Georgia
Oxygen consumption as a result of nitrification, and carbonaceous bacterial oxidation were compared in a 108 kilometer reach of the Chattahoochee River, Georgia. Nitrogenous and carbonaceous oxygen consumption were separated by using an inhibitor of nitrification 1-allyl-2-thiourea. The comparison was conducted in the laboratory using samples collected from the water column. Nitrification accounte
Authors
Theodore A. Ehlke
Geohydrology of the Cretaceous aquifer system in Georgia
No abstract available.
Authors
L.D. Pollard, R.C. Vorhis
Hydrology of buried crystalline rocks at the Savannah River Plant near Aiken, South Carolina
No abstract available.
Authors
I.W. Marine
Ground-water levels and quality data for Georgia, 1978
Mean water levels in wells across Georgia were from 0.25 foot higher to 11.4 feet lower in 1978 than in 1977, and in some areas were the lowest on record. Water levels in the principal artesian aquifer underwent a long-term decline during the period 1969-78. In some areas water levels dropped more than 10 feet. Wells tapping the Clayton Limestone in the Albany area showed a long-term decline durin
Authors
J.S. Clarke, W.G. Hester, M. P. O'Byrne
An economic analysis of selected strategies for dissolved oxygen management: Chattahoochee River, Georgia
Using the Chattahoochee River as an example, a method for evaluating the cost-effectiveness of alternative strategies for dissolved oxygen (DO) management is demonstrated. The conceptual framework for the analysis is suggested by the economic theory of production. The minimum flow of the River and the percentage of the total waste inflow receiving nitrification are considered to be two variable in
Authors
John E. Schefter, Robert M. Hirsch