Patrick C Mills (Former Employee)
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 16
Geology, hydrology, water quality, and potential for interbasin invasive-species spread by way of the groundwater pathway near Lemont, Illinois
Invasive species such as Asian carps have the potential to travel in the egg, larval, or fry stages from the Des Plaines River (DPR) to the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal (CSSC) by way of the network of secondary-permeability features in the dolomite aquifer between these water bodies. Such movement would circumvent the electric fish barrier on the canal and allow Asian carps to travel unimpeded
Authors
Robert T. Kay, P.C. Mills, P. Ryan Jackson
Hexavalent and total chromium at low reporting concentrations in source-water aquifers and surface waters used for public supply in Illinois, 2013
On the basis of their recent review of the human health effects of hexavalent chromium [Cr(VI)] in public drinking water, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is considering the need for Federal regulation of Cr(VI). Presently, only total chromium is regulated, at a Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL) of 100 micrograms per liter (µg/L). The occurrence of Cr(VI) in groundwater and surface waters ge
Authors
P.C. Mills, Richard P. Cobb
Evaluation of a mass-balance approach to determine consumptive water use in northeastern Illinois
A principal component of evaluating and managing water use is consumptive use. This is the portion of water withdrawn for a particular use, such as residential, which is evaporated, transpired, incorporated into products or crops, consumed by humans or livestock, or otherwise removed from the immediate water environment. The amount of consumptive use may be estimated by a water (mass)-balance appr
Authors
P.C. Mills, James J. Duncker, Thomas M. Over, Marian Domanski, Frank L. Engel
Groundwater-surface water relations in the Fox River watershed: insights from exploratory studies in Illinois and Wisconsin
Exploratory studies were conducted at sites bordering the Fox River in Waukesha, Wisconsin, during 2010 and McHenry, Illinois, during 2011–13. The objectives of the studies were to assess strategies for the study of and insights into the potential for directly connected groundwater and surface-water systems with natural groundwater discharge to streams diverted and (or) streamflow induced (capture
Authors
P.C. Mills
Estimated Withdrawals and Other Elements of Water Use in the Great Lakes Basin of the United States in 2005
Estimates of water withdrawals in the United States part of the Great Lakes Basin and 107 of its watersheds designated by the 8-digit hydrologic unit code (HUCs) indicate that about 30.3 billion gallons per day (Bgal/d) were withdrawn for practically all categories of use in 2005. Virtually all water withdrawn was freshwater. Surface-water withdrawals totaled 28.8 Bgal/d, or 95 percent of total wi
Authors
P.C. Mills, Jennifer B. Sharpe
Surface-Water and Ground-Water Resources of Kendall County, Illinois
Water-supply needs in Kendall County, in northern Illinois, are met exclusively from ground water derived from glacial drift aquifers and bedrock aquifers open to Silurian, Ordovician, and Cambrian System units. As a result of population growth in Kendall County and the surrounding area, water use has increased from about 1.2 million gallons per day in 1957 to more than 5 million gallons per day i
Authors
Robert T. Kay, P.C. Mills, Jennifer L. Hogan, Terri Arnold
Herbicides and their transformation products in source-water aquifers tapped by public-supply wells in Illinois, 2001-02
During 2001-02, ground-water samples were collected from 117 public-supply wells distributed throughout Illinois to evaluate the occurrence of herbicides and their transformation products in the State?s source-water aquifers. Wells were selected using a stratified-random method to ensure representation of the major types of source-water aquifers in the State. Samples were analyzed for 18 herbicide
Authors
P.C. Mills, William D. McMillan
A cross-site comparison of methods used for hydrogeologic characterization of the Galena-Platteville aquifer in Illinois and Wisconsin, with examples from selected Superfund sites
The effectiveness of 28 methods used to characterize the fractured Galena-Platteville aquifer at eight sites in northern Illinois and Wisconsin is evaluated. Analysis of government databases, previous investigations, topographic maps, aerial photographs, and outcrops was essential to understanding the hydrogeology in the area to be investigated. The effectiveness of surface-geophysical methods de
Authors
Robert T. Kay, P.C. Mills, Charles P. Dunning, Douglas J. Yeskis, James R. Ursic, Mark Vendl
Delineation of the Troy Bedrock Valley and particle-tracking analysis of ground-water flow underlying Belvidere, Illinois
The U.S. Geological Survey, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, and Illinois Environmental Protection Agency began a study of the hydrogeology, flow system, and distribution of contaminants in the aquifers underlying Belvidere, Ill., and vicinity in 1992. As part of the study, the ancestral Troy Bedrock Valley, located about 1.5 miles west of Belvidere, was identified as an important part of the
Authors
P.C. Mills, Keith J. Halford, R.P. Cobb
Hydrogeology and simulation of ground-water flow in the aquifers underlying Belvidere, Illinois
The U.S. Geological Survey investigated the
ground-water-flow system and distribution of
contaminants in the vicinity of Belvidere, Illinois,
during 1992?2000. The study included the
compilation, collection, and analyses of
hydrogeologic and water-quality data and
simulation of the ground-water-flow system.
Hydrogeologic data include lithologic,
stratigraphic, geophysical, hydraulic-proper
Authors
P.C. Mills, J.E. Nazimek, K. J. Halford, D.J. Yeskis
Potentiometric levels and water quality in the aquifers underlying Belvidere, Illinois, 1993–96
In 1992, the U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA), began a study of the hydrogeology and water quality of the aquifers underlying the vicinity of Belvidere, Boone County, Ill. Previously, volatile organic compounds (VOC's) and other constituents of industrial origin were detected in one or more ground-water samples from about 100 of the appro
Authors
P.C. Mills, C.A. Thomas, T.A. Brown, D.J. Yeskis, R.T. Kay
Areal studies aid protection of ground-water quality in Illinois, Indiana, and Wisconsin
In 1991, the U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, initiated studies designed to characterize the ground-water quality and hydrogeology in northern Illinois, and southern and eastern Wisconsin (with a focus on the north-central Illinois cities of Belvidere and Rockford, and the Calumet region of northeastern Illinois and northwestern Indiana). These
Authors
P.C. Mills, Robert T. Kay, Timothy A. Brown, Douglas J. Yeskis
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 16
Geology, hydrology, water quality, and potential for interbasin invasive-species spread by way of the groundwater pathway near Lemont, Illinois
Invasive species such as Asian carps have the potential to travel in the egg, larval, or fry stages from the Des Plaines River (DPR) to the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal (CSSC) by way of the network of secondary-permeability features in the dolomite aquifer between these water bodies. Such movement would circumvent the electric fish barrier on the canal and allow Asian carps to travel unimpeded
Authors
Robert T. Kay, P.C. Mills, P. Ryan Jackson
Hexavalent and total chromium at low reporting concentrations in source-water aquifers and surface waters used for public supply in Illinois, 2013
On the basis of their recent review of the human health effects of hexavalent chromium [Cr(VI)] in public drinking water, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is considering the need for Federal regulation of Cr(VI). Presently, only total chromium is regulated, at a Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL) of 100 micrograms per liter (µg/L). The occurrence of Cr(VI) in groundwater and surface waters ge
Authors
P.C. Mills, Richard P. Cobb
Evaluation of a mass-balance approach to determine consumptive water use in northeastern Illinois
A principal component of evaluating and managing water use is consumptive use. This is the portion of water withdrawn for a particular use, such as residential, which is evaporated, transpired, incorporated into products or crops, consumed by humans or livestock, or otherwise removed from the immediate water environment. The amount of consumptive use may be estimated by a water (mass)-balance appr
Authors
P.C. Mills, James J. Duncker, Thomas M. Over, Marian Domanski, Frank L. Engel
Groundwater-surface water relations in the Fox River watershed: insights from exploratory studies in Illinois and Wisconsin
Exploratory studies were conducted at sites bordering the Fox River in Waukesha, Wisconsin, during 2010 and McHenry, Illinois, during 2011–13. The objectives of the studies were to assess strategies for the study of and insights into the potential for directly connected groundwater and surface-water systems with natural groundwater discharge to streams diverted and (or) streamflow induced (capture
Authors
P.C. Mills
Estimated Withdrawals and Other Elements of Water Use in the Great Lakes Basin of the United States in 2005
Estimates of water withdrawals in the United States part of the Great Lakes Basin and 107 of its watersheds designated by the 8-digit hydrologic unit code (HUCs) indicate that about 30.3 billion gallons per day (Bgal/d) were withdrawn for practically all categories of use in 2005. Virtually all water withdrawn was freshwater. Surface-water withdrawals totaled 28.8 Bgal/d, or 95 percent of total wi
Authors
P.C. Mills, Jennifer B. Sharpe
Surface-Water and Ground-Water Resources of Kendall County, Illinois
Water-supply needs in Kendall County, in northern Illinois, are met exclusively from ground water derived from glacial drift aquifers and bedrock aquifers open to Silurian, Ordovician, and Cambrian System units. As a result of population growth in Kendall County and the surrounding area, water use has increased from about 1.2 million gallons per day in 1957 to more than 5 million gallons per day i
Authors
Robert T. Kay, P.C. Mills, Jennifer L. Hogan, Terri Arnold
Herbicides and their transformation products in source-water aquifers tapped by public-supply wells in Illinois, 2001-02
During 2001-02, ground-water samples were collected from 117 public-supply wells distributed throughout Illinois to evaluate the occurrence of herbicides and their transformation products in the State?s source-water aquifers. Wells were selected using a stratified-random method to ensure representation of the major types of source-water aquifers in the State. Samples were analyzed for 18 herbicide
Authors
P.C. Mills, William D. McMillan
A cross-site comparison of methods used for hydrogeologic characterization of the Galena-Platteville aquifer in Illinois and Wisconsin, with examples from selected Superfund sites
The effectiveness of 28 methods used to characterize the fractured Galena-Platteville aquifer at eight sites in northern Illinois and Wisconsin is evaluated. Analysis of government databases, previous investigations, topographic maps, aerial photographs, and outcrops was essential to understanding the hydrogeology in the area to be investigated. The effectiveness of surface-geophysical methods de
Authors
Robert T. Kay, P.C. Mills, Charles P. Dunning, Douglas J. Yeskis, James R. Ursic, Mark Vendl
Delineation of the Troy Bedrock Valley and particle-tracking analysis of ground-water flow underlying Belvidere, Illinois
The U.S. Geological Survey, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, and Illinois Environmental Protection Agency began a study of the hydrogeology, flow system, and distribution of contaminants in the aquifers underlying Belvidere, Ill., and vicinity in 1992. As part of the study, the ancestral Troy Bedrock Valley, located about 1.5 miles west of Belvidere, was identified as an important part of the
Authors
P.C. Mills, Keith J. Halford, R.P. Cobb
Hydrogeology and simulation of ground-water flow in the aquifers underlying Belvidere, Illinois
The U.S. Geological Survey investigated the
ground-water-flow system and distribution of
contaminants in the vicinity of Belvidere, Illinois,
during 1992?2000. The study included the
compilation, collection, and analyses of
hydrogeologic and water-quality data and
simulation of the ground-water-flow system.
Hydrogeologic data include lithologic,
stratigraphic, geophysical, hydraulic-proper
Authors
P.C. Mills, J.E. Nazimek, K. J. Halford, D.J. Yeskis
Potentiometric levels and water quality in the aquifers underlying Belvidere, Illinois, 1993–96
In 1992, the U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA), began a study of the hydrogeology and water quality of the aquifers underlying the vicinity of Belvidere, Boone County, Ill. Previously, volatile organic compounds (VOC's) and other constituents of industrial origin were detected in one or more ground-water samples from about 100 of the appro
Authors
P.C. Mills, C.A. Thomas, T.A. Brown, D.J. Yeskis, R.T. Kay
Areal studies aid protection of ground-water quality in Illinois, Indiana, and Wisconsin
In 1991, the U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, initiated studies designed to characterize the ground-water quality and hydrogeology in northern Illinois, and southern and eastern Wisconsin (with a focus on the north-central Illinois cities of Belvidere and Rockford, and the Calumet region of northeastern Illinois and northwestern Indiana). These
Authors
P.C. Mills, Robert T. Kay, Timothy A. Brown, Douglas J. Yeskis
*Disclaimer: Listing outside positions with professional scientific organizations on this Staff Profile are for informational purposes only and do not constitute an endorsement of those professional scientific organizations or their activities by the USGS, Department of the Interior, or U.S. Government