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
Avoiding The Inevitable? Capacity Loss From Reservoir Sedimentation Avoiding The Inevitable? Capacity Loss From Reservoir Sedimentation
The inexorable loss of capacity of the nation's reservoirs—sooner or later threatening water supplies for municipal, agricultural, and industrial uses—is but one of a number of deleterious effects wrought by sediment deposition. Trapped sediments can also damage or bury dam outlets, water intakes, and related infrastructure. Downstream effects of sediment capture and retention by...
Authors
John R. Gray, Timothy J. Randle, Kent L. Collins
Predicting thermal reference conditions for USA streams and rivers Predicting thermal reference conditions for USA streams and rivers
Temperature is a primary driver of the structure and function of stream ecosystems. However, the lack of stream temperature (ST) data for the vast majority of streams and rivers severely compromises our ability to describe patterns of thermal variation among streams, test hypotheses regarding the effects of temperature on macroecological patterns, and assess the effects of altered STs on
Authors
Ryan A. Hill, Charles P. Hawkins, Daren M. Carlisle
Approaches in highly parameterized inversion: bgaPEST, a Bayesian geostatistical approach implementation with PEST: documentation and instructions Approaches in highly parameterized inversion: bgaPEST, a Bayesian geostatistical approach implementation with PEST: documentation and instructions
The application bgaPEST is a highly parameterized inversion software package implementing the Bayesian Geostatistical Approach in a framework compatible with the parameter estimation suite PEST. Highly parameterized inversion refers to cases in which parameters are distributed in space or time and are correlated with one another. The Bayesian aspect of bgaPEST is related to Bayesian...
Authors
Michael N. Fienen, Marco D'Oria, John E. Doherty, Randall J. Hunt
Effects of best-management practices in Bower Creek in the East River priority watershed, Wisconsin, 1991-2009 Effects of best-management practices in Bower Creek in the East River priority watershed, Wisconsin, 1991-2009
Hydrologic and water-quality data were collected at Bower Creek during the periods before best-management practices (BMPs), and after BMPs were installed for evaluation of water-quality improvements. The monitoring was done between 1990 and 2009 with the pre-BMP period ending in July 1994 and the post-BMP period beginning in October 2006. BMPs installed in this basin included streambank...
Authors
Steven R. Corsi, Judy A. Horwatich, Troy D. Rutter, Roger T. Bannerman
The coming megafloods The coming megafloods
Geologic evidence shows that truly massive floods, caused by rainfall alone, have occurred in California about every 200 years. The most recent was in 1861, and it bankrupted the state. Such floods were most likely caused by atmospheric rivers: narrow bands of water vapor about a mile above the ocean that extend for thousands of miles. Much smaller forms of these rivers regularly hit...
Authors
Michael D. Dettinger, B. Lynn Ingram
Comparison of water consumption in two riparian vegetation communities along the central Platte River, Nebraska, 2008–09 and 2011 Comparison of water consumption in two riparian vegetation communities along the central Platte River, Nebraska, 2008–09 and 2011
The Platte River is a vital natural resource for the people, plants, and animals of Nebraska. A recent study quantified water use by riparian woodlands along central reaches of the Platte River, Nebraska, finding that water use was mainly regulated below maximum predicted levels. A comparative study was launched through a cooperative partnership between the U.S. Geological Survey, the...
Authors
Brent M. Hall, David L. Rus
Mississippi River streamflow measurement techniques at St. Louis, Missouri Mississippi River streamflow measurement techniques at St. Louis, Missouri
Streamflow measurement techniques of the Mississippi River at St. Louis have changed through time (1866–present). In addition to different methods used for discrete streamflow measurements, the density and range of discrete measurements used to define the rating curve (stage versus streamflow) have also changed. Several authors have utilized published water surface elevation (stage) and...
Authors
Chester C. Wastson, Robert R. Holmes, David S. Biedenham
2011 monitoring and tracking wet nitrogen deposition at Rocky Mountain National Park 2011 monitoring and tracking wet nitrogen deposition at Rocky Mountain National Park
No abstract available.
Authors
Kristi Morris, Alisa Mast, Greg Wetherbee, Jill Baron, Curt Taipale, Tamara Blett, David Gay, Jared Heath
Electromagnetic-induction logging to monitor changing chloride concentrations Electromagnetic-induction logging to monitor changing chloride concentrations
Water from the San Joaquin Delta, having chloride concentrations up to 3590 mg/L, has intruded fresh water aquifers underlying Stockton, California. Changes in chloride concentrations at depth within these aquifers were evaluated using sequential electromagnetic (EM) induction logs collected during 2004 through 2007 at seven multiple-well sites as deep as 268 m. Sequential EM logging is...
Authors
Loren F. Metzger, John A. Izbicki
Groundwater flow cycling between a submarine spring and an inland fresh water spring Groundwater flow cycling between a submarine spring and an inland fresh water spring
Spring Creek Springs and Wakulla Springs are large first magnitude springs that derive water from the Upper Floridan Aquifer. The submarine Spring Creek Springs are located in a marine estuary and Wakulla Springs are located 18 km inland. Wakulla Springs has had a consistent increase in flow from the 1930s to the present. This increase is probably due to the rising sea level, which puts...
Authors
J. Hal Davis, Richard Verdi
Modeling groundwater flow and quality Modeling groundwater flow and quality
In most areas, rocks in the subsurface are saturated with water at relatively shallow depths. The top of the saturated zone—the water table—typically occurs anywhere from just below land surface to hundreds of feet below the land surface. Groundwater generally fills all pore spaces below the water table and is part of a continuous dynamic flow system, in which the fluid is moving at...
Authors
Leonard F. Konikow, Pierre D. Glynn
Export of dissolved organic carbon from the Penobscot River basin in north-central Maine Export of dissolved organic carbon from the Penobscot River basin in north-central Maine
Dissolved organic carbon (DOC) flux from the Penobscot River and its major tributaries in Maine was determined using continuous discharge measurements, discrete water sampling, and the LOADEST regression software. The average daily flux during 2004–2007 was 71 kg C ha−1 yr−1 (392 Mt C d−1), an amount larger than measured in most northern temperate and boreal rivers. Distinct seasonal...
Authors
Thomas G. Huntington, George R. Aiken