Publications
Filter Total Items: 112
Transformation of Monoaromatic hydrocarbons to organic acids in anoxic groundwater environment Transformation of Monoaromatic hydrocarbons to organic acids in anoxic groundwater environment
The transformation of benzene and a series of alkylbenzenes was studied in anoxic groundwater of a shallow glacial-outwash aquifer near Bemidji, Minnesota, U.S.A. Monoaromatic hydrocarbons, the most water-soluble components of crude oil, were transported downgradient of an oil spill, forming a plume of contaminated groundwater. Organic acids that were not original components of the oil...
Authors
I.M. Cozzarelli, R.P. Eganhouse, M.J. Baedecker
Oxidation of aromatic contaminants coupled to microbial iron reduction Oxidation of aromatic contaminants coupled to microbial iron reduction
THE contamination of sub-surface water supplies with aromatic compounds is a significant environmental concern1,2. As these contaminated sub-surface environments are generally anaerobic, the microbial oxidation of aromatic compounds coupled to nitrate reduction, sulphate reduction and methane production has been studied intensively1-7. In addition, geochemical evidence suggests that Fe...
Authors
Derek Lovley, M.J. Baedecker, D.J. Lonergan, I.M. Cozzarelli, Elizabeth Phillips, D. Siegel
US Geological Survey Toxic Substances Hydrology Program: Proceedings of the technical meeting, Phoenix, Arizona, September 26-30, 1988 US Geological Survey Toxic Substances Hydrology Program: Proceedings of the technical meeting, Phoenix, Arizona, September 26-30, 1988
Crude oil floating at the surface of a shallow aquifer of glacial outwash, near Bemidji, Minnesota, is altered by geochemical processes. Hydrocarbons from the oil are attenuated by several reactions that include aerobic and anaerobic microbial degradation. These degradation reactions result in the development of geochemical facies in the shallow groundwater system. Groundwater most...
The mobilization of aluminum in a natural soil system: Effects of hydrologic pathways The mobilization of aluminum in a natural soil system: Effects of hydrologic pathways
A two-component soil water flow model was used in conjunction with an equilibrium speciation model WATEQF to study aluminum mobility in soils of a forested watershed, White Oak Run, in the Shenandoah National Park, Virginia. Soil solution samples, taken from the O, E, B, C1, and C2horizons, were collected from zero-tension lysimeters designed to collect faster gravitational macropore...
Authors
Isabelle Cozzarelli, Janet Herman, Roderic Parnell