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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: 4096

Quantification of metal loading to Silver Creek through the Silver Maple Claims area, Park City, Utah, May 2002 Quantification of metal loading to Silver Creek through the Silver Maple Claims area, Park City, Utah, May 2002

The Silver Maple Claims area along Silver Creek, near Park City, Utah, is administered by the Bureau of Land Management. To quantify possible sources of elevated zinc concentrations in Silver Creek that exceed water-quality standards, the U.S. Geological Survey conducted a mass-loading study in May 2002 along a 1,400-meter reach of Silver Creek that included the Silver Maple Claims area
Authors
Briant A. Kimball, Kevin K. Johnson, Robert L. Runkel, Judy I. Steiger

Dissolved pesticide and organic carbon concentrations detected in surface waters, northern Central Valley, California, 2001-2002 Dissolved pesticide and organic carbon concentrations detected in surface waters, northern Central Valley, California, 2001-2002

Field and laboratory studies were conducted to determine the effects of pesticide mixtures on Chinook salmon under various environmental conditions in surface waters of the northern Central Valley of California. This project was a collaborative effort between the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and the University of California. The project focused on understanding the environmental factors...
Authors
James L. Orlando, Lisa A. Jacobson, Kathryn Kuivila

Direct current resistivity profiling to study distribution of water in the unsaturated zone near the Amargosa Desert Research Site, Nevada Direct current resistivity profiling to study distribution of water in the unsaturated zone near the Amargosa Desert Research Site, Nevada

In order to study the distribution of water in the unsaturated zone and potential for ground-water recharge near the Amargosa Desert Research Site south of Beatty, Nevada, the U.S. Geological Survey collected direct-current resistivity measurements along three profiles in May 2003 using an eight-channel resistivity imaging system. Resistivity data were collected along profiles across the...
Authors
Jared D. Abraham, Jeffrey E. Lucius

Use of borehole radar methods and borehole geophysical logs to monitor a field-scale vegetable oil biostimulation pilot project at Fridley, Minnesota Use of borehole radar methods and borehole geophysical logs to monitor a field-scale vegetable oil biostimulation pilot project at Fridley, Minnesota

Cross-hole and surface-to-borehole radar and conventional borehole geophysical logs were used to monitor subsurface injections of vegetable oil emulsion conducted as part of a field-scale biostimulation pilot project at the Anoka County Riverfront Park (ACP), located downgradient of the Naval Industrial Reserve Ordnance Plant (NIROP), in Fridley, Minnesota. The pilot project was...
Authors
John W. Lane, Clifton C. Casey, Frederick D. Day-Lewis, A. Witten, Roelof J. Versteeg

Collection, analysis, and age-dating of sediment cores from 56 U.S. lakes and reservoirs sampled by the U.S. Geological Survey, 1992-2001 Collection, analysis, and age-dating of sediment cores from 56 U.S. lakes and reservoirs sampled by the U.S. Geological Survey, 1992-2001

The U.S. Geological Survey Reconstructed Trends National Synthesis study collected sediment cores from 56 lakes and reservoirs between 1992 and 2001 across the United States. Most of the sampling was conducted as part of the National Water-Quality Assessment (NAWQA) Program. The primary objective of the study was to determine trends in particle-associated contaminants in response to...
Authors
Peter Van Metre, Jennifer T. Wilson, Christopher C. Fuller, Edward Callender, Barbara Mahler

Transient Analysis of the Source of Water to Wells: Cape Cod, Massachusetts Transient Analysis of the Source of Water to Wells: Cape Cod, Massachusetts

A transient flow modeling analysis for potential public-supply wells on western Cape Cod, Massachusetts, demonstrates the difference between transient and steady-state recharge areas can have important implications for wellhead protection. An example of a single pumping well illustrates that commonly, used steady-state time-related capture areas do not represent the recharge area and...
Authors
John P. Masterson, D. A. Walter, D.R. LeBlanc

Importance of clay size minerals for Fe(III) respiration in a petroleum-contaminated aquifer Importance of clay size minerals for Fe(III) respiration in a petroleum-contaminated aquifer

The availability of Fe(III)-bearing minerals for dissimilatory Fe(III) reduction was evaluated in sediments from a petroleum-contaminated sandy aquifer near Bemidji, Minnesota (USA). First, the sediments from a contaminated area of the aquifer, in which Fe(III) reduction was the predominant terminal electron accepting process, were compared with sediments from a nearby, uncontaminated...
Authors
Evgenya S. Shelobolina, Robert T. Anderson, Yury N. Vodyanitskii, Anatolii V. Sivtsov, Richard Yuretich, Derek R. Lovely

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

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 R. Nimmo, Joseph P. Rousseau, Kim S. Perkins, Kenneth G. Stollenwerk, Pierre D. Glynn, Roy C. Bartholomay, LeRoy L. Knobel

Use of PRD1 bacteriophage in groundwater viral transport, inactivation, and attachment studies Use of PRD1 bacteriophage in groundwater viral transport, inactivation, and attachment studies

PRD1, an icosahedra-shaped, 62 nm (diameter), double-stranded DNA bacteriophage with an internal membrane, has emerged as an important model virus for studying the manner in which microorganisms are transported through a variety of groundwater environments. The popularity of this phage for use in transport studies involving geologic media is due, in part, to its relative stability over a...
Authors
Ronald W. Harvey, Joseph N. Ryan

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
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