Douglas Kent
Dr. Douglas Kent is a scientist emeritus with the Earth System Processes Division of the Water Mission Area, U. S. Geological Survey.
Doug Kent received an AA from Pasadena City College, a BA in chemistry from the University of California, San Diego and a PhD from Scripps Institution of Oceanography. He has conducted hydrologic research at the USGS since 1985.
Doug Kent's research at the USGS has focused on processes influencing the mobility of constituents that can affect the availability of water for beneficial use by humans and for sustaining aquatic ecosystems.
Science and Products
Multispecies reactive tracer test in an aquifer with spatially variable chemical conditions, Cape Cod, Massachusetts: Dispersive transport of bromide and nickel
Effect of adsorbed metals ions on the transport of Zn- and Ni-EDTA complexes in a sand and gravel aquifer
Modeling the influence of variable pH on the transport of zinc in a contaminated aquifer using semiempirical surface complexation models
Multispecies reactive tracer test in an aquifer with spatially variable chemical conditions
Water-quality data and methods of analysis for samples collected near a plume of sewage-contaminated ground water, Ashumet Valley, Cape Cod, Massachusetts, 1993-94
Application of the surface complexation concept to complex mineral assemblages
Development and testing of a compartmentalized reaction network model for redox zones in contaminated aquifers
Experimental investigation and modeling of uranium (VI) transport under variable chemical conditions
Modeling hexavalent chromium reduction in groundwater in field-scale transport and laboratory batch experiments
Transport of chromium and selenium in a pristine sand and gravel aquifer: Role of adsorption processes
Transport of chromium and selenium in the suboxic zone of a shallow aquifer: Influence of redox and adsorption reactions
Batch experiments characterizing the reduction of chromium(VI) using suboxic material from a mildly reducing sand and gravel aquifer
Non-USGS Publications**
**Disclaimer: The views expressed in Non-USGS publications are those of the author and do not represent the views of the USGS, Department of the Interior, or the U.S. Government.
Science and Products
Multispecies reactive tracer test in an aquifer with spatially variable chemical conditions, Cape Cod, Massachusetts: Dispersive transport of bromide and nickel
Effect of adsorbed metals ions on the transport of Zn- and Ni-EDTA complexes in a sand and gravel aquifer
Modeling the influence of variable pH on the transport of zinc in a contaminated aquifer using semiempirical surface complexation models
Multispecies reactive tracer test in an aquifer with spatially variable chemical conditions
Water-quality data and methods of analysis for samples collected near a plume of sewage-contaminated ground water, Ashumet Valley, Cape Cod, Massachusetts, 1993-94
Application of the surface complexation concept to complex mineral assemblages
Development and testing of a compartmentalized reaction network model for redox zones in contaminated aquifers
Experimental investigation and modeling of uranium (VI) transport under variable chemical conditions
Modeling hexavalent chromium reduction in groundwater in field-scale transport and laboratory batch experiments
Transport of chromium and selenium in a pristine sand and gravel aquifer: Role of adsorption processes
Transport of chromium and selenium in the suboxic zone of a shallow aquifer: Influence of redox and adsorption reactions
Batch experiments characterizing the reduction of chromium(VI) using suboxic material from a mildly reducing sand and gravel aquifer
Non-USGS Publications**
**Disclaimer: The views expressed in Non-USGS publications are those of the author and do not represent the views of the USGS, Department of the Interior, or the U.S. Government.