Publications
Publications from USGS science centers throughout the Southeast Region.
Filter Total Items: 10419
Panola Mountain, Georgia: A Water, Energy, and Biogeochemical Budgets Program Site Panola Mountain, Georgia: A Water, Energy, and Biogeochemical Budgets Program Site
The Panola Mountain Research Watershed (PMRW) is a 41-hectare forested watershed in the southern Piedmont physiographic province near Atlanta, Georgia. The watershed contains a naturally regenerated second-growth forest on abandoned agricultural land, typical of the Piedmont. Research at PMRW has focused on how streamflow is generated, and in particular, on how water and solutes move...
Authors
Norman E. Peters, Richard P. Hooper, Thomas G. Huntington, Brent T. Aulenback
Overview of the Texas Source Water Assessment Project Overview of the Texas Source Water Assessment Project
The 1996 Amendments to the Safe Drinking Water Act require, for the first time, that each state prepare a source water assessment for all PWS. Previously, Federal regulations focused on sampling and enforcement with emphasis on the quality of delivered water. These Amendments emphasize the importance of protecting the source water. States are required to determine the drinking-water...
Authors
Randy L. Ulery
PCBs, liver lesions, and biomarker responses in adult walleye (Stizostedium vitreum vitreum) collected from Green Bay, Wisconsin PCBs, liver lesions, and biomarker responses in adult walleye (Stizostedium vitreum vitreum) collected from Green Bay, Wisconsin
Adult walleye were collected from several locations in the Lower Fox River and Green Bay, Wisconsin (the assessment area) and two relatively uncontaminated reference locations (Lake Winnebago and Patten Lake, Wisconsin) between July and October in 1996 and 1997. Whole body and liver samples collected in 1996 were analyzed for total PCBs, PCB congeners, and liver histological lesions...
Authors
Mace G. Barron, Michael J. Anderson, Dave Cacela, Joshua Lipton, Swee J. Teh, David E. Hinton, Judith T. Zelikoff, Audrey L. Dikkeboom, Donald E. Tillitt, Mark Holey, Nancy Denslow
The potential for calcium depletion in forest ecosystems of southeastern United States: Review and analysis The potential for calcium depletion in forest ecosystems of southeastern United States: Review and analysis
Biogeochemical mass balance assessments of calcium status in southeastern forests indicate that losses through harvesting and soil leaching often exceed inputs from atmospheric deposition and weathering. Many forest soils of the southeastern United States are particularly sensitive because these soils and the underlying saprolite from which these soils are derived are largely depleted of
Authors
Thomas G. Huntington
Nutrients discharged to the Mississippi River from eastern Iowa watersheds, 1996-1997 Nutrients discharged to the Mississippi River from eastern Iowa watersheds, 1996-1997
The introduction of nutrients from chemical fertilizer, animal manure, wastewater, and atmospheric deposition to the eastern Iowa environment creates a large potential for nutrient transport in watersheds. Agriculture constitutes 93 percent of all land use in eastern Iowa. As part of the U.S. Geological Survey National Water Quality Assessment Program, water samples were collected...
Authors
Kent Becher, Douglas J. Schnoebelen, Kimberlee K. Akers
Summary of the major water-quality findings from the Eastern Iowa Basins study unit of the National Water-Quality Assessment Program Summary of the major water-quality findings from the Eastern Iowa Basins study unit of the National Water-Quality Assessment Program
An integrated assessment of the water quality in streams and aquifers in the Wapsipinicon, Iowa, Cedar, and Skunk River basins was conducted in 1996 through 1998 as part of the Eastern Iowa Basins (EIWA) study unit of the U.S. Geological Survey's National Water-Quality Assessment Program (NAWQA). The EIWA study unit is one of 59 study units across the Nation designed to assess the status...
Authors
Stephen J. Kalkhoff
Pesticides in ground water of the United States, 1992-1996 Pesticides in ground water of the United States, 1992-1996
During the first cycle of the National Water Quality Assessment (1992–1996), ground water in 20 of the nation's major hydro-logic basins was analyzed for 90 pesticide compounds (pesticides and degradates). One or more of the pesticide compounds examined were detected at 48.4% of the 2485 ground water sites sampled. However, approximately 70% of the sites where pesticides were detected...
Authors
Dana W. Kolpin, Jack E. Barbash, Robert J. Gilliom
Importance of the Mississippi River Basin for investigating agricultural–chemical contamination of the hydrologic cycle Importance of the Mississippi River Basin for investigating agricultural–chemical contamination of the hydrologic cycle
This special issue is devoted to recent and ongoing research relating to the fate and transport of agricultural chemicals in the Mississippi River Basin by the US Geological Survey Toxic Substances Hydrology (Toxics) Program. The Mississippi River Basin drains approximately 3 200 000 km2 representing 41% of the United States. This is the largest river in the United States and the third...
Authors
Dana W. Kolpin
Tucuxi (Sotalia fluviatilis) occurs in Nicaragua, 800 km north of its previously known range Tucuxi (Sotalia fluviatilis) occurs in Nicaragua, 800 km north of its previously known range
No abstract available.
Authors
Thomas Carr, Robert K. Bonde
Seed germination of two Everglades species, Cladium jamaicense and Typha domingensis Seed germination of two Everglades species, Cladium jamaicense and Typha domingensis
The germination requirements of Cladium jamaicense Crantz and Typha domingensis Pers. were studied under controlled conditions in the laboratory. Treatments included six temperature regimes, (constant temperatures of 15 20, 25, 30°C, and two fluctuating day : night temperature regimes of 25 : 10°C and 30 : 20°C), two light levels (14 : 10 h light : dark photoperiod and 24 h dark...
Authors
Bent Lorenzen, Hans Brix, Karen L. McKee, I.A. Mendelssohn, ShiLi Miao
Monitoring beach morphology changes using small-format aerial photography and digital softcopy photogrammetry Monitoring beach morphology changes using small-format aerial photography and digital softcopy photogrammetry
Current methods of monitoring beach morphology changes commonly involve the establishment of Global Positioning System profiles that are surveyed on a regular basis. Although this method produces precise measurements of coastal topography, it is costly in time and effort and may result in large data gaps between profiles. Much of our understanding of coastal dynamics is thus limited by...
Authors
Cheryl Hapke, Bruce M. Richmond