Publications
Dive into our publications and explore the science from the Environmental Health Program (Toxic Substances Hydrology and Contaminant Biology).
Filter Total Items: 3785
Simultaneous determination of major and trace elements by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry/optical emission spectrometry Simultaneous determination of major and trace elements by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry/optical emission spectrometry
No abstract available.
Authors
John R. Garbarino, Howard E. Taylor, W.C. Batie
Transport of microspheres and indigenous bacteria through a sandy aquifer: Results of natural- and forced-gradient tracer experiments Transport of microspheres and indigenous bacteria through a sandy aquifer: Results of natural- and forced-gradient tracer experiments
Transport of indigenous bacteria through sandy aquifer sediments was investigated in forced- and natural-gradient tracer teste. A diverse population of bacteria was collected and concentrated from groundwater at the site, stained with a DNA-specific fluorochrome, and injected back into the aquifer. Included with the injectate were a conservative tracer (Br- or Cl-) and bacteria-sized (0...
Authors
R.W. Harvey, L.H. George, R. L. Smith, D.R. LeBlanc
Modification of a method-of-characteristics solute-transport model to incorporate decay and equilibrium-controlled sorption or ion exchange Modification of a method-of-characteristics solute-transport model to incorporate decay and equilibrium-controlled sorption or ion exchange
The U.S. Geological Survey computer model of two-dimensional solute transport and dispersion in ground water (Konikow and Bredehoeft, 1978) has been modified to incorporate the following types of chemical reactions: (1) first-order irreversible rate-reaction, such as radioactive decay; (2) reversible equilibrium-controlled sorption with linear, Freundlich, or Langmuir isotherms; and (3)...
Authors
D.J. Goode, Leonard F. Konikow
Can we determine the biological availability of sediment-bound trace elements? Can we determine the biological availability of sediment-bound trace elements?
It is clear from available data that the susceptibility of biological communities to trace element contamination differs among aquatic environments. One important reason is that the bioavailability of metals in sediments appears to be altered by variations in sediment geochemistry. However, methods for explaining or predicting the effect of sediment geochemistry upon metal...
Authors
Samuel N. Luoma
Physical and chemical characteristics of a metal-contaminated overbank deposit, west-central South Dakota, USA Physical and chemical characteristics of a metal-contaminated overbank deposit, west-central South Dakota, USA
The deposit along the Belle Fourche River is typically up to 2 m thick and extends about 90 m away from the channel along the insides of meander bends. The sediments contain above-background levels of copper, iron, manganese, zinc, and particularly arsenic. An influx at high streamflow of uncontaminated sediment from terraces and the premining floodplain as well as from tributaries...
Authors
D. C. Marron
Trace metal associations in the water column of South San Francisco Bay, California Trace metal associations in the water column of South San Francisco Bay, California
Spatial distributions of copper (Cu), zinc (Zn) and cadmium (Cd) were followed along a longitudinal gradient of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in South San Francisco Bay (herein referred to as the South Bay). Dissolved Cu, Zn and Cd concentrations ranged from 24 to 66 nM, from 20 to 107 nM and from 1·2 to 4·7 nM, respectively, in samples collected on five dates beginning with the spring
Authors
J.S. Kuwabara, Cecily C.Y. Chang, J. E. Cloern, T. L. Fries, J.A. Davis, S. N. Luoma
Chemical hydrogeology in natural and contaminated environments Chemical hydrogeology in natural and contaminated environments
Chemical hydrogeology, including organic and inorganic aspects, has contributed to an increased understanding of groundwater flow systems, geologic processes, and stressed environments. Most of the basic principles of inorganic-chemical hydrogeology were first established by investigations of organic-free, regional-scale systems for which simplifying assumptions could be made. The...
Authors
W. Back, M.J. Baedecker
Coprecipitation and redox reactions of manganese oxides with copper and nickel Coprecipitation and redox reactions of manganese oxides with copper and nickel
Open-system, continuous-titration experiments have been done in which a slow flux of ∼0.02 molar solution of Mn2+ chloride, nitrate, or perchlorate with Cu2+ or Ni2+ in lesser concentrations was introduced into an aerated reactor solution held at constant temperature and at constant pH by a pH-stat titrator that added dilute NaOH. The resulting mixtures of metal oxyhydroxides and their...
Authors
J.D. Hem, Carol J. Lind, C. E. Roberson
Circular convection during subsurface injection of liquid waste, St. Petersburg, Florida Circular convection during subsurface injection of liquid waste, St. Petersburg, Florida
Injection of liquid waste into a highly transmissive, saltwater-bearing, fractured dolomite underlying the city of St. Petersburg, Florida, provided an opportunity to study density-dependent flow associated with two miscible and density-different liquids. The injection zone was 98 m thick with a radial hydraulic conductivity of 762 m/d and a vertical hydraulic conductivity of 152 m/d...
Authors
John J. Hickey
Spectroscopic evidence for organic diacid complexation with dissolved silica in aqueous systems—I. Oxalic acid Spectroscopic evidence for organic diacid complexation with dissolved silica in aqueous systems—I. Oxalic acid
Increased solubility of quartz and mobilization in contaminated groundwater due to the complexation with dissolved organic acids has been recently proposed [Bennett and Siegel, Nature 326, 684–686 (1987)]. Using laser Raman and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopies, we have examined mixed solutions of oxalic and silicic acids at near neutral pH in the tenth molar concentration ranges...
Authors
N.A. Marley, P. Bennett, D.R. Janecky, J.S. Gaffney
Use of on-site high performance liquid chromatography to evaluate the magnitude and extent of organic contaminants in aquifers Use of on-site high performance liquid chromatography to evaluate the magnitude and extent of organic contaminants in aquifers
Appraisal of ground water contaminated by organic substances raises problems of difficult sample collection and timely chemical analysis. High-performance liquid chromatography was evaluated for on-site determination of specific organic contaminants in ground water samples and was used at three study sites. Organic solutes were determined directly in water samples, with little or no...
Authors
D.F. Goerlitz, B.J. Franks
Calorimetry of heterogeneous systems: H+ binding to TiO2 in NaCl Calorimetry of heterogeneous systems: H+ binding to TiO2 in NaCl
A simultaneous calorimetric and potentiometric technique has been developed for measuring the thermodynamics of proton binding to mineral oxides in the presence of a supporting electrolyte. Modifications made to a commercial titration calorimeter to add a combination pH electrode and maintain an inert atmosphere in the calorimeter reaction vessel are described. A procedure to calibrate
Authors
S.R. Mehr, D.J. Eatough, L.D. Hansen, E.A. Lewis, J.A. Davis