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: 19049
A generalized watershed disturbance-invertebrate relation applicable in a range of environmental settings across the continental United States A generalized watershed disturbance-invertebrate relation applicable in a range of environmental settings across the continental United States
It is widely recognized that urbanization can affect ecological conditions in aquatic systems; numerous studies have identified impervious surface cover as an indicator of urban intensity and as an index of development at the watershed, regional, and national scale. Watershed percent imperviousness, a commonly understood urban metric was used as the basis for a generalized watershed...
Authors
Jeffrey J. Steuer
Quality of stormwater runoff discharged from Massachusetts highways, 2005-07 Quality of stormwater runoff discharged from Massachusetts highways, 2005-07
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), in cooperation with U.S. Department of Transportation Federal Highway Administration and the Massachusetts Department of Transportation, conducted a field study from September 2005 through September 2007 to characterize the quality of highway runoff for a wide range of constituents. The highways studied had annual average daily traffic (AADT) volumes...
Authors
Kirk P. Smith, Gregory E. Granato
Water-quality data from storm runoff after the 2007 fires, San Diego County, California Water-quality data from storm runoff after the 2007 fires, San Diego County, California
The U.S. Geological Survey collected water-quality samples during the first two storms after the Witch and Harris Fires (October 2007) in southern California. The sampling locations represent an urban area (two residential sites in Rancho Bernardo that were affected by the Witch Fire; a drainage ditch and a storm drain) and a rural area (Cotton-wood Creek, which was downstream of a...
Authors
Gregory O. Mendez
A method for assessing carbon stocks, carbon sequestration, and greenhouse-gas fluxes in ecosystems of the United States under present conditions and future scenarios A method for assessing carbon stocks, carbon sequestration, and greenhouse-gas fluxes in ecosystems of the United States under present conditions and future scenarios
he Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 (EISA), Section 712, mandates the U.S. Department of the Interior to develop a methodology and conduct an assessment of the Nation’s ecosystems, focusing on carbon stocks, carbon sequestration, and emissions of three greenhouse gases (GHGs): carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide. The major requirements include (1) an assessment of all...
Authors
Brian A. Bergamaschi, Richard Bernknopf, David Clow, Dennis Dye, Stephen Faulkner, William Forney, Robert Gleason, Todd Hawbaker, Jinxun Liu, Shu-Guang Liu, Stephen Prisley, Bradley Reed, Matthew Reeves, Matthew Rollins, Benjamin Sleeter, Terry Sohl, Sarah Stackpoole, Stephen Stehman, Robert G. Striegl, Anne Wein, Zhi-Liang Zhu
Simulation of streamflow in the McTier Creek watershed, South Carolina Simulation of streamflow in the McTier Creek watershed, South Carolina
The McTier Creek watershed is located in the Sand Hills ecoregion of South Carolina and is a small catchment within the Edisto River Basin. Two watershed hydrology models were applied to the McTier Creek watershed as part of a larger scientific investigation to expand the understanding of relations among hydrologic, geochemical, and ecological processes that affect fish-tissue mercury
Authors
Toby D. Feaster, Heather E. Golden, Kenneth R. Odom, Mark A. Lowery, Paul Conrads, Paul M. Bradley
Groundwater availability in the Atlantic Coastal Plain of North and South Carolina Groundwater availability in the Atlantic Coastal Plain of North and South Carolina
The Atlantic Coastal Plain aquifers and confining units of North and South Carolina are composed of crystalline carbonate rocks, sand, clay, silt, and gravel and contain large volumes of high-quality groundwater. The aquifers have a long history of use dating back to the earliest days of European settlement in the late 1600s. Although extensive areas of some of the aquifers have or...
Authors
Bruce G. Campbell, Alissa L. Coes
Hydrologic conditions in the Florida Panther National Wildlife Refuge, 2006-2007 Hydrologic conditions in the Florida Panther National Wildlife Refuge, 2006-2007
Much of the surface water that flows into the Florida Panther National Wildlife Refuge (FPNWR) probably exits southward through Fakahatchee Strand as it did prior to development, because culverts and bridges constructed along I-75 allow overland flow to continue southward within the strand. During the dry season and periods of low water levels, however, much of the flow is diverted...
Authors
Ronald S. Reese
Approaches to highly parameterized inversion-A guide to using PEST for groundwater-model calibration Approaches to highly parameterized inversion-A guide to using PEST for groundwater-model calibration
Highly parameterized groundwater models can create calibration difficulties. Regularized inversion-the combined use of large numbers of parameters with mathematical approaches for stable parameter estimation-is becoming a common approach to address these difficulties and enhance the transfer of information contained in field measurements to parameters used to model that system. Though...
Authors
John E. Doherty, Randall J. Hunt
Estimating Monthly Water Withdrawals, Return Flow, and Consumptive Use in the Great Lakes Basin Estimating Monthly Water Withdrawals, Return Flow, and Consumptive Use in the Great Lakes Basin
Water-resource managers and planners require water-withdrawal, return-flow, and consumptive-use data to understand how anthropogenic (human) water use affects the hydrologic system. Water models like MODFLOW and GSFLOW use calculations and input values (including water-withdrawal and return flow data) to simulate and predict the effects of water use on aquifer and stream conditions...
Authors
Kimberly H. Shaffer, Rosemary S. Stenback
Stream gage descriptions and streamflow statistics for sites in the Tigris River and Euphrates River Basins, Iraq Stream gage descriptions and streamflow statistics for sites in the Tigris River and Euphrates River Basins, Iraq
Statistical summaries of streamflow data for all long-term streamflow-gaging stations in the Tigris River and Euphrates River Basins in Iraq are presented in this report. The summaries for each streamflow-gaging station include (1) a station description, (2) a graph showing annual mean discharge for the period of record, (3) a table of extremes and statistics for monthly and annual mean...
Authors
Dina K. Saleh
Understanding beach health throughout the Great Lakes-Entering a new era of investigations Understanding beach health throughout the Great Lakes-Entering a new era of investigations
For over a decade, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) has been a leader in the science of beach health. The overall mission of this work is to provide science-based information and methods that will allow beach managers to more accurately make beach closure and advisory decisions, understand the sources and physical processes affecting beach contaminants, and understand how science-based
Authors
Water Resources Division U.S. Geological Survey
Floods of May 30 to June 15, 2008, in the Iowa River and Cedar River Basins, eastern Iowa Floods of May 30 to June 15, 2008, in the Iowa River and Cedar River Basins, eastern Iowa
As a result of prolonged and intense periods of rainfall in late May and early June, 2008, along with heavier than normal snowpack the previous winter, record flooding occurred in Iowa in the Iowa River and Cedar River Basins. The storms were part of an exceptionally wet period from May 29 through June 12, when an Iowa statewide average of 9.03 inches of rain fell; the normal statewide...
Authors
Mike S. Linhart, David A. Eash