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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

Relative effect of temperature and pH on diel cycling of dissolved trace elements in Prickly Pear Creek, Montana Relative effect of temperature and pH on diel cycling of dissolved trace elements in Prickly Pear Creek, Montana

Diel (24 hr) cycles in dissolved metal and As concentrations have been documented in many northern Rocky Mountain streams in the U.S.A. The cause(s) of the cycles are unknown, although temperature- and pH-dependent sorption reactions have been cited as likely causes. A light/dark experiment was conducted to isolate temperature and pH as variables affecting diel metal cycles in Prickly...
Authors
Clain A. Jones, D. A. Nimick, R. Blaine McCleskey

Use of an electromagnetic seepage meter to investigate temporal variability in lake seepage Use of an electromagnetic seepage meter to investigate temporal variability in lake seepage

A commercially available electromagnetic flowmeter is attached to a seepage cylinder to create an electromagnetic seepage meter (ESM) for automating measurement of fluxes across the sediment/water interface between ground water and surface water. The ESM is evaluated through its application at two lakes in New England, one where water seeps into the lake and one where water seeps out of...
Authors
D.O. Rosenberry, R. H. Morin

Fractionation and characterization of organic matter in wastewater from a swine waste-retention basin Fractionation and characterization of organic matter in wastewater from a swine waste-retention basin

Organic matter in wastewater sampled from a swine waste-retention basin in Iowa was fractionated into 14 fractions on the basis of size (particulate, colloid, and dissolved); volatility; polarity (hydrophobic, transphilic, hydrophilic); acid, base, neutral characteristics; and precipitate or flocculates (floc) formation upon acidification. The compound-class composition of each of these...
Authors
Jerry A. Leenheer, Colleen E. Rostad

Methods for the preparation and analysis of solids and suspended solids for methylmercury Methods for the preparation and analysis of solids and suspended solids for methylmercury

This report presents the methods and method performance data for the determination of methylmercury concentrations in solids and suspended solids. Using the methods outlined here, the U.S. Geological Survey's Wisconsin District Mercury Laboratory can consistently detect methylmercury in solids and suspended solids at environmentally relevant concentrations. Solids can be analyzed wet or...
Authors
John F. DeWild, Shane D. Olund, Mark L. Olson, Michael T. Tate

Surface-Water and Ground-Water Interactions in the Central Everglades, Florida Surface-Water and Ground-Water Interactions in the Central Everglades, Florida

Recharge and discharge are hydrological processes that cause Everglades surface water to be exchanged for subsurface water in the peat soil and the underlying sand and limestone aquifer. These interactions are thought to be important to water budgets, water quality, and ecology in the Everglades. Nonetheless, relatively few studies of surface water and ground water interactions have been...
Authors
Judson W. Harvey, Jessica T. Newlin, James M. Krest, Jungyill Choi, Eric A. Nemeth, Steven L. Krupa

Tannins and terpenoids as major precursors of Suwannee River fulvic acid Tannins and terpenoids as major precursors of Suwannee River fulvic acid

Suwannee River fulvic acid (SRFA) was fractionated into 7 fractions by normal-phase chromatography on silica gel followed by reverse-phase fractionation on XAD-8 resin that produced 18 subfractions. Selected major subfractions were characterized by 13C-nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), infrared spectrometry, and elemental analyses. 13C-NMR spectra of the subfractions were more indicative...
Authors
Jerry A. Leenheer, Colleen E. Rostad

Water year 2004: Western water managers feel the heat Water year 2004: Western water managers feel the heat

This spring, a rare combination of exceptionally warm temperatures and near-record lack of precipitation in the western United States caused a rapid change in hydrologic conditions and an unexpectedly early onset of spring conditions. With much of the western U.S. already in its fifth year of drought, an above-average western snowpack on 1 March 2004 provided hope for much-needed...
Authors
Thomas Pagano, Phil Pasteris, Michael D. Dettinger, Daniel Cayan, Kelly Redmond

Inhibition and enhancement of microbial surface colonization: the role of silicate composition Inhibition and enhancement of microbial surface colonization: the role of silicate composition

Classical treatment of cell attachment by models of filtration or coulombic attraction assumes that attachment of cells to mineral surfaces would be controlled by factors such as response to predation, collision efficiency, or coulombic attraction between the charged groups at the mineral and cell surfaces. In the study reported here, the passive model of attachment was investigated...
Authors
Jennifer A. Roberts

Importance of the Vadose Zone in analyses of unconfined aquifer tests Importance of the Vadose Zone in analyses of unconfined aquifer tests

Analytical models commonly used to interpret unconfined aquifer tests have been based on upper-boundary (water table) conditions that do not adequately address effects of time-varying drainage from the vadose zone. As a result, measured and simulated drawdown data may not agree and hydraulic parameters may be inaccurately estimated. A 72-hour aquifer test conducted in Cape Cod...
Authors
A.F. Moench

Hydraulic and geochemical framework of the Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory vadose zone Hydraulic and geochemical framework of the Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory vadose zone

Questions of major importance for subsurface contaminant transport at the Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory (INEEL) include (i) travel times to the aquifer, both average or typical values and the range of values to be expected, and (ii) modes of contaminant transport, especially sorption processes. The hydraulic and geochemical framework within which these questions...
Authors
John Nimmo, Joseph Rousseau, Kim S. Perkins, Kenneth Stollenwerk, Pierre Glynn, Roy Bartholomay, LeRoy Knobel

Uptake pathway for Ag bioaccumulation in three benthic invertebrates exposed to contaminated sediments Uptake pathway for Ag bioaccumulation in three benthic invertebrates exposed to contaminated sediments

We exposed 3 benthic invertebrates, the clam Macoma balthica, the polychaete Neanthes arenaceodentataand the amphipod Leptocheirus plumulosus, to Ag-contaminated sediments to evaluate the relative importance of various uptake routes (sediments, porewater or overlying water, and supplementary food) for Ag bioaccumulation. Silver bioaccumulation was evaluated at 4 levels of sediment Ag (0...
Authors
H. Yoo, J.-S. Lee, B.-G. Lee, I.T. Lee, C.E. Schlekat, C.-H. Koh, S. N. Luoma
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