Publications
Read publications and other informational products to learn more about USGS science occurring in the Mississippi Basin.
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Traveltime and reaeration characteristics for Salt Creek basin in northeastern Illinois, June–October 1995 Traveltime and reaeration characteristics for Salt Creek basin in northeastern Illinois, June–October 1995
Traveltime and reaeration measurements were made in the Salt Creek Basin, a tributary to the Des Plaines River, in northeastern Illinois during three study periods from June through October 1995. The measurements were made in representative lengths on three reaches of Salt Creek: upper reach, middle reach, and lower reach. During the measurement periods the streamflows of Salt Creek...
Authors
Mary J. Turner
Delineation of flooding within the upper Mississippi River Basin — Flood of June 18 through August 4, 1993, in Des Moines and vicinity, Iowa Delineation of flooding within the upper Mississippi River Basin — Flood of June 18 through August 4, 1993, in Des Moines and vicinity, Iowa
This hydrologic investigations atlas shows the areas in and near Des Moines, Iowa, that were flooded by the Des Moines and the Raccoon Rivers and Walnut, Fourmile, and Beaver Creeks from June 18 through August 4, 1993. This map also depicts the Federal Emergency Management Agency 100-year flood boundaries. The area drained by the Des Moines River upstream from Des Moines received more...
Authors
Bryan D. Schaap
Delineation of flooding within the upper Mississippi River Basin—Flood of June 19-July 31, 1993, in Davenport, Iowa, and vicinity Delineation of flooding within the upper Mississippi River Basin—Flood of June 19-July 31, 1993, in Davenport, Iowa, and vicinity
The hydrologic investigations atlas shows areas in and near Davenport, Iowa, that were flooded by the Mississippi River in 1993. This atlas also depicts the Federal Emergency Management Agency 100-year flood boundary. The drainage basin upstream from Mississippi River Lock and Dam 15 at Davenport received between 100 and 250 percent of normal rainfall from January through July, 1993. The...
Authors
Bryan D. Schaap
Ground-water levels and flow at selected study sites in the Walnut Creek Management System Evaluation Area, Boone and Story counties, Iowa, 1991-93 Ground-water levels and flow at selected study sites in the Walnut Creek Management System Evaluation Area, Boone and Story counties, Iowa, 1991-93
Data collected from May 1991 through September 1993 to determine seasonal fluctuations in ground-water levels and to estimate directions of ground-water flow in the saturated zone at selected study sites at the Iowa Management Systems Evaluation Area in the Walnut Creek Watershed are presented. The Walnut Creek Watershed is located on glacial deposits of Wisconsinan age in central Iowa...
Authors
Robert Buchmiller
Remote sensing of mangrove wetlands: Relating canopy spectra to site-specific data Remote sensing of mangrove wetlands: Relating canopy spectra to site-specific data
No abstract available.
Authors
Elijah Ramsey III, John R. Jensen
Effects of nutrients and hydroperiod on Typha, Cladium, and Eleocharis: Implications for everglades restoration Effects of nutrients and hydroperiod on Typha, Cladium, and Eleocharis: Implications for everglades restoration
The recent expansion of Typha domingensis (Typha) into areas of the Everglades previously dominated by Cladium jamaicense (Cladium) communities has led to competing hypotheses about the importance of nutrient concentration vs. hydroperiod in controlling the distribution of these species. In this study, experimental mixtures of Typha domingensis, Cladium jamaicense, and Eleocharis...
Authors
S. Newman, James B. Grace, J. W. Koebel
Movement of agricultural chemicals between surface water and ground water, lower Cedar River basin, Iowa Movement of agricultural chemicals between surface water and ground water, lower Cedar River basin, Iowa
Movement of agricultural chemicals alachlor, atrazine, cyanazine, deethylatrazine, deisopropylatrazine, and metolachlor between surface water and ground water is documented by data collected from May 1989 through July 1991 at an unfarmed study site adjacent to the Cedar River in Iowa. During periods of runoff, these chemicals moved from the Cedar River into the alluvial aquifer with bank...
Authors
Paul J. Squillace, J.P. Caldwell, P.M. Schulmeyer, C.A. Harvey
Development and evaluation of sediment quality guidelines for Florida coastal waters Development and evaluation of sediment quality guidelines for Florida coastal waters
The weight-of-evidence approach to the development of sediment quality guidelines (SQGs) was modified to support the derivation of biological effects-based SQGs for Florida coastal waters. Numerical SQGs were derived for 34 substances, including nine trace metals, 13 individual polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), three groups of PAHs, total polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), seven...
Authors
Donald D. MacDonald, R. Scott Carr, Fred D. Calder, Edward R. Long, Christopher G. Ingersoll
Seagrass responses to long-term light reduction by brown tide in upper Laguna Madre, Texas: Distribution and biomass patterns Seagrass responses to long-term light reduction by brown tide in upper Laguna Madre, Texas: Distribution and biomass patterns
A brown tide caused by a very dense bloom of an as yet undescribed species of the new class Pelagophyceae was first reported in upper Laguna Madre, Texas, USA, in June 1990 and has been there continuously through December 1995. No change in response to reduced light was evident in the distribution of the seagrass Halodulewrightii along transects sampled before the brown tide in 1988 and...
Authors
Christopher P. Onuf
Sediment quality assessment studies of Tampa bay, Florida Sediment quality assessment studies of Tampa bay, Florida
A survey of the toxicity of sediments throughout the Tampa Bay estuary was performed as part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's National Status and Trends Program. The objectives of the survey were to determine the spatial extent and severity of toxicity and to identify relationships between chemical contamination and toxicity. Three independent toxicity tests were...
Authors
Scott R. Carr, Duane Chapman, Edward R. Long, Herbert L. Windom, Glen Thursby, Gail M. Sloane, Douglas A. Wolfe
Inexpensive, easy-to-construct suction coring devices usable from small boats Inexpensive, easy-to-construct suction coring devices usable from small boats
Collection of sediment cores in depths of 1-5 m is difficult with traditional sampling gear. Here we describe three suction coring devices constructed with readily available plumbing supplies and parts easily made from acrylic plastic and silicone sealant. The samplers have been used successfully in sediments ranging from coarse sands and shell hash to muds, highly organic deposits, and...
Authors
Christopher P. Onuf, Duane Chapman, William M. Rizzo
Embryotoxicity of 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD): Theembryonic vasculature is a physiological target for TCDD-induced DNA damage and apoptotic cell death in medaka (Orizias latipes) Embryotoxicity of 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD): Theembryonic vasculature is a physiological target for TCDD-induced DNA damage and apoptotic cell death in medaka (Orizias latipes)
Vertebrate embryos are extremely sensitive to environmental contaminants known as planar halogenated hydrocarbons (PHHs). The physiological targets that mediate PHH-induced embryotoxicity are not known. We have characterized embryotoxicity in medaka (Orizias latipes) caused by 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD), the prototypic PHH. DNA degradation in cells of the embryonic...
Authors
Susannah M. Cantrell, Linda H. Lutz, Donald E. Tillitt, Mark Hannink