Publications
This list of Water Resources Mission Area publications includes both official USGS publications and journal articles authored by our scientists. A searchable database of all USGS publications can be accessed at the USGS Publications Warehouse.
Filter Total Items: 19021
An Assessment of the Potential Effects of Aquifer Storage and Recovery on Mercury Cycling in South Florida An Assessment of the Potential Effects of Aquifer Storage and Recovery on Mercury Cycling in South Florida
Mercury contamination in the environment is a global concern, especially in areas with abundant wetlands, such as south Florida. As the causal factors of this concern improve, scientists find that many factors that do not necessarily affect mercury concentrations, such as flooding and drying cycles, or changes to carbon and sulfate loading, can profoundly affect net mercury toxicity...
Authors
David P. Krabbenhoft, George R. Aiken, Mary P. Anderson
Water-Level Data for the Albuquerque Basin and Adjacent Areas, Central New Mexico, Period of Record Through September 30, 2006 Water-Level Data for the Albuquerque Basin and Adjacent Areas, Central New Mexico, Period of Record Through September 30, 2006
The Albuquerque Basin, located in central New Mexico, is about 100 miles long and 25 to 40 miles wide. The basin is defined as the extent of consolidated and unconsolidated deposits of Tertiary and Quaternary age that encompass the structural Rio Grande Rift within the basin. Drinking-water supplies throughout the basin are currently (2007) obtained solely from ground-water resources. An...
Authors
Joseph E. Beman
Streambed infiltration and ground-water flow from the Trout Creek drainage, an intermittent tributary to the Humboldt River, north-central Nevada Streambed infiltration and ground-water flow from the Trout Creek drainage, an intermittent tributary to the Humboldt River, north-central Nevada
Ground water is abundant in many alluvial basins of the Basin and Range Physiographic Province of the western United States. Water enters these basins by infiltration along intermittent and ephemeral channels, which originate in the mountainous regions before crossing alluvial fans and piedmont alluvial plains. Water also enters the basins as subsurface ground-water flow directly from...
Authors
David E. Prudic, Richard G. Niswonger, James R. Harrill, James L. Wood
Focused ground-water recharge in the Amargosa Desert Basin Focused ground-water recharge in the Amargosa Desert Basin
The Amargosa River is an approximately 300-kilometer long regional drainage connecting the northern highlands on the Nevada Test Site in Nye County, Nev., to the floor of Death Valley in Inyo County, Calif. Streamflow analysis indicates that the Amargosa Desert portion of the river is dry more than 98 percent of the time. Infiltration losses during ephemeral flows of the Amargosa River...
Authors
David A. Stonestrom, David E. Prudic, Michelle Ann Walvoord, Jared D. Abraham, Amy E. Stewart-Deaker, Patrick A. Glancy, Jim Constantz, Randell J. Laczniak, Brian J. Andraski
Overview of ground-water recharge study sites Overview of ground-water recharge study sites
Multiyear studies were done to examine meteorologic and hydrogeologic controls on ephemeral streamflow and focused ground-water recharge at eight sites across the arid and semiarid southwestern United States. Campaigns of intensive data collection were conducted in the Great Basin, Mojave Desert, Sonoran Desert, Rio Grande Rift, and Colorado Plateau physiographic areas. During the study...
Authors
Jim Constantz, Kelsey S. Adams, David A. Stonestrom
Water quality on the Prairie Band Potawatomi Reservation, northeastern Kansas, June 1996 through August 2006 Water quality on the Prairie Band Potawatomi Reservation, northeastern Kansas, June 1996 through August 2006
This report describes surface- and ground-water-quality data collected on the Prairie Band Potawatomi Reservation in northeastern Kansas from November 2003 through August 2006 (hereinafter referred to as the "current study period"). Data from this study period are compared to results from June 1996 through August 2003, which are published in previous reports as part of a multiyear...
Authors
Heather C. Ross Schmidt, Heidi E. Mehl, Larry M. Pope
Effects of flow diversions on water and habitat quality: Examples from California's highly manipulated Sacramento–San Joaquin Delta Effects of flow diversions on water and habitat quality: Examples from California's highly manipulated Sacramento–San Joaquin Delta
We use selected monitoring data to illustrate how localized water diversions from seasonal barriers, gate operations, and export pumps alter water quality across the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta (California). Dynamics of water-quality variability are complex because the Delta is a mixing zone of water from the Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers, agricultural return water, and the San...
Authors
Nancy E. Monsen, James E. Cloern, Jon R. Burau
Holocene climates and connections between the San Francisco Bay Estuary and its watershed: A review Holocene climates and connections between the San Francisco Bay Estuary and its watershed: A review
Climate over the watershed of the San Francisco Bay Delta estuary system varies on a wide range of space and time scales, and affects downstream estuarine ecosystems. The historical climate has included mild to severe droughts and torrential rains accompanied by flooding, providing important lessons for present-day resource managers. Paleoclimate records spanning the last 10,000 years...
Authors
F. Malamud-Roam, M. Dettinger, B. Lynn Ingram, Malcolm K. Hughes, Joan Florsheim
Use of streamflow data to estimate base flowground-water recharge for Wisconsin Use of streamflow data to estimate base flowground-water recharge for Wisconsin
The average annual base flow/recharge was determined for streamflow-gaging stations throughout Wisconsin by base-flow separation. A map of the State was prepared that shows the average annual base flow for the period 1970-99 for watersheds at 118 gaging stations. Trend analysis was performed on 22 of the 118 streamflow-gaging stations that had long-term records, unregulated flow, and...
Authors
W.A. Gebert, M.J. Radloff, E.J. Considine, J.L. Kennedy
Suspended sediment and sediment-associated contaminants in San Francisco Bay Suspended sediment and sediment-associated contaminants in San Francisco Bay
Water-quality managers desire information on the temporal and spatial variability of contaminant concentrations and the magnitudes of watershed and bed-sediment loads in San Francisco Bay. To help provide this information, the Regional Monitoring Program for Trace Substances in the San Francisco Estuary (RMP) takes advantage of the association of many contaminants with sediment particles...
Authors
D. H. Schoellhamer, T.E. Mumley, J.E. Leatherbarrow
Quantification of changes in metal loading from storm runoff, Merse River (Tuscany, Italy) Quantification of changes in metal loading from storm runoff, Merse River (Tuscany, Italy)
The Merse River in Tuscany is affected by mine drainage and the weathering of mine wastes along several kilometres of its catchment. The metal loading to the stream was quantified by defining detailed profiles of discharge and concentration, using tracer-dilution and synoptic-sampling techniques. During the course of a field experiment to evaluate metal loading to the Merse, such data...
Authors
Briant A. Kimball, F. Bianchi, Katherine Walton-Day, Robert L. Runkel, M. Nannucci, A. Salvadori
Two new genera of Lumbriculidae (Annelida, Clitellata) from North Carolina, USA Two new genera of Lumbriculidae (Annelida, Clitellata) from North Carolina, USA
Recent benthic macroinvertebrate collections from North Carolina contained many undescribed oligochaete taxa, mostly belonging to the family Lumbriculidae. Three of the new species had arrangements of spermathecae and atria previously unreported for the family, and were assigned to new two genera. Pilaridrilus is distinguished by the location of spermathecal pores five segments behind...
Authors
S.V. Fend, D. R. Lenat