Publications
Browse more than 150,000 publications authored by our scientists over the past 100+ year history of the USGS. Publications available are: USGS-authored journal articles, series reports, book chapters, other government publications, and more.
Upper Midwest Environmental Sciences Center Publications
Filter Total Items: 3311
Sediment deposition in the White River Reservoir, northwestern Wisconsin Sediment deposition in the White River Reservoir, northwestern Wisconsin
The history of deposition in the White River Reservoir was reconstructed from a study of sediment in the reservoir. Suspended-sediment concentrations, particle size, and streamflow characteristics were measured at gaging stations upstream and downstream from the reservoir from November 1975 through September 1977- Characteristics of the sediments were determined from borings and samples...
Authors
W. G. Batten, S. M. Hindall
Status of projects in Minnesota fiscal year 1978 Status of projects in Minnesota fiscal year 1978
No abstract available.
Authors
D. G. Adolphson, J. A. Jannis
Instructions for the battery pack BP-76 HD Instructions for the battery pack BP-76 HD
No abstract available.
Authors
J. V. Skinner
Three-dimensional finite-difference model of ground-water system underlying the Muskegon County wastewater disposal system, Michigan Three-dimensional finite-difference model of ground-water system underlying the Muskegon County wastewater disposal system, Michigan
The spray irrigation system used by Muskegon County for wastewater treatment is the largest of its kind in the United States. It has 2200 hectares of irrigated farm land, 688 hectares of treatment lagoons, and 105 kilometers of drainage tile. The system has a design capacity of 1.8 cubic meters of wastewater per second. A three-dimensional finite-difference model was developed to study...
Authors
Michael G. McDonald, William B. Fleck
Reaeration capacity of the Rock River between Lake Koshkonong, Wisconsin and Rockton, Illinois Reaeration capacity of the Rock River between Lake Koshkonong, Wisconsin and Rockton, Illinois
The reaeration capacity of the Rock River from Lake Koshkonong, Wisconsin, to Rockton, Illinois, was determined using the energy-dissipation model. The model was calibrated using data from radioactive-tracer measurements in the study reach. Reaeration coefficients (K2) were computed for the annual minimum 7-day mean discharge that occurs on the average of once in 10 years (Q7,10). A time...
Authors
R. Stephen Grant
Low-flow characteristics of small streams in proposed Public Law 566 basins Low-flow characteristics of small streams in proposed Public Law 566 basins
Low-flow characteristics of Wisconsin streams in basins considered for work under Public Law 566 are presented in this report. The low-flow characteristics presented are the annual minimum 1-day mean flow below which the flow will fall on the average of once in 2 years (Q7,2) and the annual minimum 7-day mean flow below which the flow will fall on the average of once in 10 years (Q7,10)...
Authors
Stephen J. Field
Effects of dietary addition of vitamins C and D3 on growth and calcium and phosphorus content of pond-cultured channel catfish Effects of dietary addition of vitamins C and D3 on growth and calcium and phosphorus content of pond-cultured channel catfish
Fingerling channel catfish, Ictalurus punctatus, were fed one of three diets: one deficient in vitamin C (ascorbic acid), one deficient in vitamin D3 (cholecalciferol), or one containing both vitamins. Semimonthly from May to September and monthly from September to February, calcium and phosphorus were determined in eviscerated bodies and fat-free skeletons by neutron activation analysis...
Authors
C.A. Launer, O.W. Tiemeier, C.W. Deyoe
Survival of two species of freshwater clams Corbicula leana and Magnonaias boykiniana after exposure to antimycin Survival of two species of freshwater clams Corbicula leana and Magnonaias boykiniana after exposure to antimycin
Abstract not submitted to date
Authors
L. L. Marking, J. H. Chandler
Seasonal trends in summer diet of the lapland longspur near Barrow Alaska USA Seasonal trends in summer diet of the lapland longspur near Barrow Alaska USA
Contents of lapland longspur [Calcarius lapponicus] stomachs and esophagi were sampled near Barrow, Alaska [USA], from May-Aug. in 1969, 1971, 1972 and 1973. Data from stomach contents were corrected for differential digestion of prey items. Longspurs shifted seasonally from larval to adult arthropods and back to larvae, responding to changes in the abundance of these prey items. Seeds...
Authors
T. W. Custer, F.A. Pitelka
Water resources of the Lake Superior watershed, northeastern Minnesota Water resources of the Lake Superior watershed, northeastern Minnesota
The Lake Superior watershed is mostly a highland, generally 1,200 feet (366 meters) to 2,000 feet (610 meters) above mean sea level. It extends from Duluth to the Canadian border. Both maximum and minimum altitudes for Minnesota occur in the watershed; 2.301 ft (701 ) at Eagle Mountain, about 12 mi (19 km) northwest of Grand Marais, and 602 ft (184 m), the normal level of Lake Superior...
Authors
Perry G. Olcott, D.W. Ericson, P.E. Felsheim, W.L. Broussard
Hydrology of the Nevin Wetland near Madison, Wisconsin Hydrology of the Nevin Wetland near Madison, Wisconsin
The 120-acre Nevin wetland at the south edge of Madison, Wis., is a discharge area of the local ground-water system. A hydrologic unit composed of drift and the upper part of an underlying sandstone sequence provides ground-water inflow. Ground water enters as springflow and as leakage upward through the organic wetland soils. The average annual water budget for the wetland was based on...
Authors
R.P. Novitzki
Ten-year low mean monthly discharge determinations for ungaged streams near waste-stabilization ponds in Wisconsin Ten-year low mean monthly discharge determinations for ungaged streams near waste-stabilization ponds in Wisconsin
Communities that use fill-and-draw waste-water treatment lagoons or waste-stabilization ponds are required to discharge during the spring and fall of the year at a rate that does not exceed the assimilative capacity of the receiving stream. The 10-year low mean monthly discharge (MMQ10) for October, November, April, and May for the receiving stream has been used to establish the...
Authors
Stephen J. Field