Publications
Publications from USGS science centers throughout the Southeast Region.
Filter Total Items: 10351
The emerging role of lidar remote sensing in coastal research and resource management The emerging role of lidar remote sensing in coastal research and resource management
Knowledge of coastal elevation is an essential requirement for resource management and scientific research. Recognizing the vast potential of lidar remote sensing in coastal studies, this Special Issue includes a collection of articles intended to represent the state-of-the-art for lidar investigations of nearshore submerged and emergent ecosystems, coastal morphodynamics, and hazards...
Authors
John Brock, Samuel J. Purkis
Comparison of Hydrologic and Water-Quality Characteristics of Two Native Tallgrass Prairie Streams with Agricultural Streams in Missouri and Kansas Comparison of Hydrologic and Water-Quality Characteristics of Two Native Tallgrass Prairie Streams with Agricultural Streams in Missouri and Kansas
This report presents the results of a study by the U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the Missouri Department of Natural Resources, to analyze and compare hydrologic and water-quality characteristics of tallgrass prairie and agricultural basins located within the historical distribution of tallgrass prairie in Missouri and Kansas. Streamflow and water-quality data from two...
Authors
David C. Heimann
Total selenium in irrigation drain inflows to the Salton Sea, California, April 2009 Total selenium in irrigation drain inflows to the Salton Sea, California, April 2009
This report presents the results for the final sampling period (April 2009) of a 4-year monitoring program to characterize selenium concentrations in selected irrigation drains flowing into the Salton Sea, California. Total selenium and total suspended solids were determined in water samples. Total selenium, percent total organic carbon, and particle size were determined in sediments...
Authors
Thomas W. May, Michael J. Walther, Michael K. Saiki, William G. Brumbaugh
Sediment characterization and dynamics in Lake Pontchartrain, Louisiana Sediment characterization and dynamics in Lake Pontchartrain, Louisiana
Lake Pontchartrain in southeastern Louisiana is the largest of several shallow estuaries that together cover over 15,000 km2. Wetlands, forests, and large urban areas surround the lake. Primary transport mechanisms of sediments to Lake Pontchartrain include urban runoff, major diversions of the Mississippi River, discharge from streams along the north and west shores, and tidal...
Authors
James G. Flocks, Jack L Kindinger, Marci E Marot, Charles W Holmes
Preliminary Assessment of the Potential for Inducing Stormwater Infiltration in Cook County, Illinois Preliminary Assessment of the Potential for Inducing Stormwater Infiltration in Cook County, Illinois
The Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago is responsible for all of the regional stormwater management for Cook County in northeastern Illinois, one of the largest urban areas in the United States. Continuing urban expansion in this area has increased stormwater runoff and combined sewer overflows and likely decreased groundwater recharge. Passive induced...
Authors
William S. Morrow, Jennifer B. Sharpe
Coastal change along the shore of northeastern South Carolina— The South Carolina Coastal Erosion Study Coastal change along the shore of northeastern South Carolina— The South Carolina Coastal Erosion Study
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the South Carolina Sea Grant Consortium, conducted a 7-year, multidisciplinary study of coastal erosion in northeastern South Carolina. Shoreline behavior along the coast of Long Bay is dictated by waves, tidal currents, and sediment supply that act within the overall constraints of the regional geologic setting. Beaches are thin ribbons of...
Authors
W. C. Schwab, P. T. Gayes, R.A. Morton, N. W. Driscoll, W. E. Baldwin, W. A. Barnhardt, J. F. Denny, M.S. Harris, M.P. Katuna, T.R. Putney, G. Voulgaris, J.C. Warner, E.E. Wright
Summary of surface-water quality data from the Illinois River Basin in Northeast Oklahoma, 1970-2007 Summary of surface-water quality data from the Illinois River Basin in Northeast Oklahoma, 1970-2007
The quality of streams in the Illinois River Basin of northeastern Oklahoma is potentially threatened by increased quantities of wastes discharged from increasing human populations, grazing of about 160,000 cattle, and confined animal feeding operations raising about 20 million chickens. Increasing numbers of humans and livestock in the basin contribute nutrients and bacteria to surface...
Authors
William J. Andrews, Mark F. Becker, S. Jerrod Smith, Robert L. Tortorelli
The Mississippi Embayment Regional Aquifer Study (MERAS): Documentation of a groundwater-flow model constructed to assess water availability in the Mississippi embayment The Mississippi Embayment Regional Aquifer Study (MERAS): Documentation of a groundwater-flow model constructed to assess water availability in the Mississippi embayment
The Mississippi Embayment Regional Aquifer Study (MERAS) was conducted with support from the Groundwater Resources Program of the U.S. Geological Survey Office of Groundwater. This report documents the construction and calibration of a finite-difference groundwater model for use as a tool to quantify groundwater availability within the Mississippi embayment. To approximate the...
Authors
Brian R. Clark, Rheannon M. Hart
Hydrogeology and Groundwater Resources of the Coastal Aquifers of Southeastern Massachusetts Hydrogeology and Groundwater Resources of the Coastal Aquifers of Southeastern Massachusetts
The glacially derived aquifer systems of southeastern Massachusetts compose the largest groundwater reservoir in the State. Population increases, land-use changes, and climate change in this area could lead to three primary environmental effects that relate directly to groundwater resources - (1) increases in pumping that could adversely affect environmentally sensitive groundwater-fed...
Authors
John P. Masterson, Donald A. Walter
Quality of Surface Water in Missouri, Water Year 2008 Quality of Surface Water in Missouri, Water Year 2008
The U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the Missouri Department of Natural Resources, designed and operates a series of monitoring stations on streams throughout Missouri known as the Ambient Water-Quality Monitoring Network. During the 2008 water year (October 1, 2007, through September 30, 2008), data were collected at 67 stations, including two U.S. Geological Survey National...
Authors
William Otero-Benitez, Jerri V. Davis
Defining fish nursery habitats: An application of otolith elemental fingerprinting in Tampa Bay, Florida Defining fish nursery habitats: An application of otolith elemental fingerprinting in Tampa Bay, Florida
Fishing in Tampa Bay enhances the quality of life of the area's residents and visitors. However, people's desire to settle along the Bay's shorelines and tributaries has been detrimental to the very habitat believed to be crucial to prime target fishery species. Common snook (Centropomus undecimalis) and red drum (Sciaenops ocellatus) are part of the suite of estuarine fishes that 1) are
Authors
Janet A. Ley, Carole C. McIvor, Ernst B Peebles, Holly Rolls, Suzanne T. Cooper
Paper birch decline in the Niobrara River Valley, Nebraska: Weather, microclimate, and birch stand conditions Paper birch decline in the Niobrara River Valley, Nebraska: Weather, microclimate, and birch stand conditions
The Niobrara River Valley in north-central Nebraska supports scattered stands of paper birch (Betula papyrifera Marsh), a species more typical of boreal forests. These birch stands are considered to be relictual populations that have persisted since the end of the Wisconsin glaciation, when regional flora was more boreal in nature (Wright 1970, Kaul and others, 1988). Dieback of canopy...
Authors
Esther D. Stroh, Joel P. Miller