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Publications

Dive into our publications and explore the science from the Environmental Health Program (Toxic Substances Hydrology and Contaminant Biology).

Filter Total Items: 4093

The composition of coexisting jarosite-group minerals and water from the Richmond mine, Iron Mountain, California The composition of coexisting jarosite-group minerals and water from the Richmond mine, Iron Mountain, California

Jarosite-group minerals accumulate in the form of stalactites and fine-grained mud on massive pyrite in the D drift of the Richmond mine, Iron Mountain, California. Water samples were collected by placing beakers under the dripping stalactites and by extracting pore water from the mud using a centrifuge. The water is rich in Fe3+ and SO4 2−, with a pH of approximately 2.1, which is...
Authors
Heather E. Jamieson, Clare Robinson, Charles N. Alpers, D. Kirk Nordstrom, Alexei Poustovetov, Heather A. Lowers

Chemical weathering rates of a soil chronosequence on granitic alluvium: III. Hydrochemical evolution and contemporary solute fluxes and rates Chemical weathering rates of a soil chronosequence on granitic alluvium: III. Hydrochemical evolution and contemporary solute fluxes and rates

Although long-term changes in solid-state compositions of soil chronosequences have been extensively investigated, this study presents the first detailed description of the concurrent hydrochemical evolution and contemporary weathering rates in such sequences. The most direct linkage between weathering and hydrology over 3 million years of soil development in the Merced chronosequence in...
Authors
A. F. White, M. S. Schulz, D.V. Vivit, A.E. Blum, David A. Stonestrom, J.W. Harden

Environmental impacts of oil production on soil, bedrock, and vegetation at the U.S. Geological Survey Osage-Skiatook Petroleum Environmental Research site A, Osage County, Oklahoma Environmental impacts of oil production on soil, bedrock, and vegetation at the U.S. Geological Survey Osage-Skiatook Petroleum Environmental Research site A, Osage County, Oklahoma

The U.S. Geological Survey is investigating the impacts of oil and gas production on soils, groundwater, surface water, and ecosystems in the United States. Two sites in northeastern Oklahoma (sites A and B) are presently being investigated under the Osage–Skiatook Petroleum Environmental Research project. Oil wells on the lease surrounding site A in Osage County, Oklahoma, produced...
Authors
J. K. Otton, R. A. Zielinski, B. D. Smith, M.M. Abbott, B. D. Keeland

Combined use of borehole geophysics and packers to site potable wells in a contaminated area in Montville, Connecticut Combined use of borehole geophysics and packers to site potable wells in a contaminated area in Montville, Connecticut

A leaking underground gasoline tank contaminated a crystalline bedrock aquifer in Montville, Connecticut, USA with MTBE and benzene. At the original residential bedrock supply wells, the median MTBE concentration was 165 micrograms per liter (mg/L), and the median benzene concentration was 320 mg/L. The maximum concentrations of MTBE and benzene were 4,300 mg/l and 1,700 mg/L...
Authors
A. Green, John W. Lane, Carole D. Johnson, John Williams, Remo A. Mondazzi, Peter K. Joesten

Time-series monitoring in fractured-rock aquifers Time-series monitoring in fractured-rock aquifers

Time-lapse monitoring of subsurface processes is an emerging and promising area of hydrogeophysics. The combined use of non-invasive or minimally invasive geophysical methods with hydraulic and geochemical sampling is a cost-effective approach for aquifer characterization, long-term aquifer monitoring, and remediation monitoring. Time-lapse geophysical surveys can indirectly measure time...
Authors
Carole D. Johnson, John W. Lane, Frederick D. Day-Lewis

Organic materials in geology Organic materials in geology

No abstract available.
Authors
K. E. Peters, Frances D. Hostettler

Hydrogeology Journal in 2004 Hydrogeology Journal in 2004

Hydrogeology Journal continues to flourish. The increase in the size of our yearly volume attests to the success and growing international reputation of the journal. Until 2001, HJ produced about 600 printed pages each year. This number has steadily increased, and in 2005 and 2006, HJ will be allocated 800 pages per year by the publisher. Despite this good news, the journal is having...
Authors
Clifford Voss, Perry Olcott, Robert Schneider, Christine Watson

Ground water recharge and discharge in the central Everglades Ground water recharge and discharge in the central Everglades

Rates of ground water recharge and discharge are not well known in the central Everglades. Here we report estimates of ground water recharge and discharge at 15 sites in the Everglades Nutrient Removal Project and in Water Conservation Area 2A (WCA-2A), along with measurements of hydraulic properties of peat at 11 sites. A simple hydrogeologic simulation was used to assess how specific...
Authors
Judson W. Harvey, Steven L. Krupa, James M. Krest

Effects of aquifer travel time on nitrogen transport to a coastal embayment Effects of aquifer travel time on nitrogen transport to a coastal embayment

Effects of aquifer travel time on nitrogen reaction and loading to Popponesset Bay, a eutrophic coastal embayment on western Cape Cod, Massachusetts, are evaluated through hydrologic analysis of flow and transport. Approximately 10% of the total nitrogen load to the embayment is intercepted by fresh water ponds and delivered to the coast by connecting streams. For the nitrogen load not...
Authors
John A. Colman, John P. Masterson, Wendy J. Pabich, Donald A. Walter

Ground water beneath coastal bays of the Delmarva Peninsula: Ages and nutrients Ground water beneath coastal bays of the Delmarva Peninsula: Ages and nutrients

To complement a large-scale geophysical investigation of occurrence and discharge of fresh water beneath Delaware, Maryland, and Virginia (Delmarva) coastal bays, we measured (1) salinity and nutrient concentrations in ground water samples from several offshore coring sites and (2) a suite of chemical and isotopic parameters, including age tracers, in ground water samples from a Delaware...
Authors
John F. Bratton, John Karl Böhlke, Frank T. Manheim, David E. Krantz

Assessing conceptual models for subsurface reactive transport of inorganic contaminants Assessing conceptual models for subsurface reactive transport of inorganic contaminants

In many subsurface situations where human health and environmental quality are at risk (e.g., contaminant hydrogeology petroleum extraction, carbon sequestration, etc.),scientists and engineers are being asked by federal agency decision-makers to predict the fate of chemical species under conditions where both reactions and transport are processes of first-order importance. In 2002, a...
Authors
James A. Davis, Steven B. Yabusaki, Carl Steefel, John M. Zachara, Gary P. Curtis, George D. Redden, Louise J. Criscenti, Bruce D. Honeyman
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