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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: 3784

Spatial and temporal variability of picocyanobacteria Synechococcus sp. in San Francisco Bay Spatial and temporal variability of picocyanobacteria Synechococcus sp. in San Francisco Bay

We collected samples monthly, from April to August 1998, to measure the abundance of autotrophic picoplankton in San Francisco Bay. Samples taken along a 160-km transect showed that picocyanobacteria (Synechococcus sp.) was a persistent component of the San Francisco Bay phytoplankton in all the estuarine habitats, from freshwater to seawater and during all months of the spring-summer...
Authors
X. Ning, J. E. Cloern, B.E. Cole

Methyl-mercury degradation pathways: A comparison among three mercury impacted ecosystems Methyl-mercury degradation pathways: A comparison among three mercury impacted ecosystems

We examined microbial methylmercury (MeHg) degradation in sediment of the Florida Everglades, Carson River (NV), and San Carlos Creek (CA), three freshwater environments that differ in the extent and type of mercury contamination and sediment biogeochemistry. Degradation rate constant (kdeg) values increased with total mercury (Hgt) contamination both among and within ecosystems. The...
Authors
M. Marvin-DiPasquale, J. Agee, C. Mcgowan, R.S. Oremland, M. Thomas, D. Krabbenhoft, C.C. Gilmour

Microbial populations in contaminant plumes Microbial populations in contaminant plumes

Efficient biodegradation of subsurface contaminants requires two elements: (1) microbial populations with the necessary degradative capabilities, and (2) favorable subsurface geochemical and hydrological conditions. Practical constraints on experimental design and interpretation in both the hydrogeological and microbiological sciences have resulted in limited knowledge of the interaction...
Authors
S.K. Haack, B.A. Bekins

Evaluation of ground-penetrating radar to detect free-phase hydrocarbons in fractured rocks: Results of numerical modeling and physical experiments Evaluation of ground-penetrating radar to detect free-phase hydrocarbons in fractured rocks: Results of numerical modeling and physical experiments

The suitability of common-offset ground-penetrating radar (GPR) to detect free-phase hydrocarbons in bedrock fractures was evaluated using numerical modeling and physical experiments. The results of one- and two-dimensional numerical modeling at 100 megahertz indicate that GPR reflection amplitudes are relatively insensitive to fracture apertures ranging from 1 to 4 mm. The numerical...
Authors
J.W. Lane, M. L. Buursink, F.P. Haeni, R.J. Versteeg

Metal-sulfate salts from sulfide mineral oxidation Metal-sulfate salts from sulfide mineral oxidation

The observation of “efflorescences,” or the flowering of salts, associated with periods of dryness in soils, in closed-basin lakes, in rock outcrops, and in mines and mine wastes has been noted since early antiquity. The formation of metal-sulfate salts, in connection with the mining of metals, was a phenomenon well known to the early Greek and Roman civilizations. Alum, most commonly...
Authors
J.L. Jambor, D. Kirk Nordstrom, Charles N. Alpers

Iron and aluminum hydroxysulfates from acid sulfate waters Iron and aluminum hydroxysulfates from acid sulfate waters

Acid sulfate waters are produced mostly by the oxidation of common sulfide minerals such as pyrite, chalcopyrite, pyrrhotite, and marcasite in rocks, soils, sediments, and industrial wastes. This spontaneous process of mineral weathering plays a fundamental role in the supergene alteration of ore deposits, the formation of acid sulfate soils, and the mobilization and release of acidity...
Authors
J.M. Bigham, D. Kirk Nordstrom

Use of radioimmunoassay as a screen for antibiotics in confined animal feeding operations and confirmation by liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry Use of radioimmunoassay as a screen for antibiotics in confined animal feeding operations and confirmation by liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry

Approximately one-half of the 50 000000 lb of antibiotics produced in the USA are used in agriculture. Because of the intensive use of antibiotics in the management of confined livestock operations, the potential exists for the transport of these compounds and their metabolites into our nation's water resources. A commercially available radioimmunoassay method, developed as a screen for
Authors
M. T. Meyer, J.E. Bumgarner, J.L. Varns, J.V. Daughtridge, E.M. Thurman, K.A. Hostetler

Determining timescales for groundwater flow and solute transport Determining timescales for groundwater flow and solute transport

One of the principal uses of environmental tracers is for determining the ages of soil waters and groundwaters. (We may refer to this as ‘hydrochronology’by analogy with the dating of solid materials known as geochronology.) Information on soil water and groundwater age enables timescales for a range of subsurface processes to be determined. For example, ‘groundwater stratigraphy’is used
Authors
Peter G. Cook, J.K. Bohlke

Potential for nonenzymatic reduction of Fe(III) via electron shuttling in subsurface sediments Potential for nonenzymatic reduction of Fe(III) via electron shuttling in subsurface sediments

The potential for various substances to serve as electron shuttles between Fe(III)-reducing microorganisms and insoluble Fe(III) oxides in aquifer sediments was evaluated in order to determine whether abiological mechanisms might play a role in the apparent microbial reduction of Fe(III) in subsurface sediments. Humic substances (humics) and the humics analogue, anthraquinone-2,6...
Authors
Kelly P. Nevin, Derek R. Lovely

Stable isotope systematics of sulfate minerals Stable isotope systematics of sulfate minerals

Stable isotope studies of sulfate minerals are especially useful for unraveling the geochemical history of geological systems. All sulfate minerals can yield sulfur and oxygen isotope data. Hydrous sulfate minerals, such as gypsum, also yield oxygen and hydrogen isotope data for the water of hydration, and more complex sulfate minerals, such as alunite and jarosite also yield oxygen and...
Authors
Robert R. Seal, Charles N. Alpers, Robert O. Rye

Aerobic microbial mineralization of dichloroethene as sole carbon substrate Aerobic microbial mineralization of dichloroethene as sole carbon substrate

Microorganisms indigenous to the bed sediments of a black- water stream utilized 1,2-dichloroethene (1,2-DCE) as a sole carbon substrate for aerobic metabolism. Although no evidence of growth was observed in the minimal salts culture media used in this study, efficient aerobic microbial mineralization of 1,2-DCE as sole carbon substrate was maintained through three sequential transfers...
Authors
P. M. Bradley, F. H. Chapelle

Atmospheric nitrogen in the Mississippi River Basin: Amissions, deposition and transport Atmospheric nitrogen in the Mississippi River Basin: Amissions, deposition and transport

Atmospheric deposition of nitrogen has been cited as a major factor in the nitrogen saturation of forests in the north-eastern United States and as a contributor to the eutrophication of coastal waters, including the Gulf of Mexico near the mouth of the Mississippi River. Sources of nitrogen emissions and the resulting spatial patterns of nitrogen deposition within the Mississippi River...
Authors
G.B. Lawrence, D. A. Goolsby, W.A. Battaglin, G.J. Stensland
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