isotope geochemistry
Radium and radon in ground water in the Chickies Quartzite, southeastern Pennsylvania
1993
Radium and radon in ground water in the Chickies Quartzite, southeastern Pennsylvania
Senior, Lisa A.
Master's Thesis
Hydrology
Randy L. Bassett
PDF of abstract available at http://pubs.usgs.gov/wri/1992/4088/report.pdf
(pending) Solute inputs to soil and stream waters in a seasonally snow-covered mountain catchment determined using Ge/Si, 87Sr/86Sr and major ion chemistry: Valles Caldera, New Mexico
2012
Solute inputs to soil and stream waters in a seasonally snow-covered mountain catchment determined using Ge/Si, 87Sr/86Sr and major ion chemistry: Valles Caldera, New Mexico
Porter, Courtney
Master's Thesis
Hydrology
Jennifer C. McIntosh
Weathering releases lithogenic elements to soil and stream waters, and regulates life in catchment ecosystems. Seasonal and inter-annual variations in hydrologic conditions may change subsurface flowpaths, modifying the influence of weathering on stream water composition. This two-year study aims to determine the seasonal and inter-annual changes in solute sources to stream and soil waters in a seasonally snow-covered headwater catchment in the Jemez Mountains in northern New Mexico using a multi-tracer approach including major cations, strontium isotopes, germanium (Ge)/silica (Si) ratios and trace metals. Climatic forcing was different for the two years studied; 2010 had ample snow accumulation resulting in an increase in stream flow during melt, whereas little snowfall in 2011 caused minimal snowmelt response in the hydrograph. Stream water base cations display relatively constant concentrations with variations in the hydrograph, suggesting that stream water concentrations are not dependent on dilution from snowmelt and storm events, but instead on fluxes from subsurface water supplies. Strontium isotope ratios of stream waters during 2010 and 2011 snowmelt periods (0.707497 - 0.707548) were similar to the La Jara catchment spring water Sr-isotope ratio (0.707510) indicating spring water as a single dominant source of major cations to stream waters. However, concentrations of Ge, Fe, Al, and dissolved organic carbon (DOC), which are generally thought to originate from shallow soil waters, increase with the rise in the 2010 snowmelt hydrograph. This suggests that stream waters contain components of both shallow soil water and spring water during snowmelt. Following snowmelt, Ge, Al, Fe, and DOC concentrations decrease and remain low for the remainder of the study period. This is reflective of a reoccurrence of a single source of spring water to streams even during the monsoon season. This change in solute source was not observed in 2011 due to little snow fall, resulting in freezing soils which prevented the infiltration of melt waters that flush out the soil solutes. The lack of an increase in Ge/Si ratios and Al, Fe, and DOC concentrations during the summer rains for both 2010 and 2011 shows that groundwater dominates stream water composition after the snowmelt period (June-March).
Characterization of water interaction with the Apache Leap tuff, Superior, Arizona, using stable isotopes of oxygen and hydrogen
1988
Characterization of water interaction with the Apache Leap tuff, Superior, Arizona, using stable isotopes of oxygen and hydrogen
Rogoff, Eric Brian
Master's Thesis
Hydrology
Daniel D. Evans
Austin Long
PDF of abstract here
Carbon-4 measurements and characterization of dissolved organic carbon in ground water
1987
Carbon-4 measurements and characterization of dissolved organic carbon in ground water
Murphy, Ellyn Margaret
Doctoral Dissertation
Hydrology
Stanley N. Davis
PDF of abstract here
Use of chloride and chlorine isotopes in the unsaturated zone to characterize recharge at the Nevada test site
1987
Use of chloride and chlorine isotopes in the unsaturated zone to characterize recharge at the Nevada test site
Gifford, Seth Kelley III
Master's Thesis
Hydrology
Stanley N. Davis
PDF of abstract here
- characterization
- chloride
- chlorine isotope
- groundwater recharge
- hydrogeochemical model
- hydrogeochemistry
- integrated hydrogeochemical modeling
- isotope geochemistry
- isotopic characterization
- Nevada
- Nevada test site
- recharge
- recharge properties
- site characterization
- test
- test site
- unsaturated
- unsaturated zone
- utilization
Radionuclide transport as vapor through unsaturated fractured rock
1985
Radionuclide transport as vapor through unsaturated fractured rock
Green, Ronald Thomas
Doctoral Dissertation
Hydrology
Daniel D. Evans
PDF of abstract here
Fractionation of stable chlorine isotopes during transport through semipermeable membranes
1985
Fractionation of stable chlorine isotopes during transport through semipermeable membranes
Campbell, Darcy Jo
Master's Thesis
Hydrology
Stanley N. Davis
PDF of abstract here
Isotopic composition of stable carbon and carbon dioxide concentration of atmosphere in streambeds near Tombstone, Arizona
1984
Isotopic composition of stable carbon and carbon dioxide concentration of atmosphere in streambeds near Tombstone, Arizona
Riddle, Jeffrey Scott
Master's Thesis
Hydrology
Eugene S. Simpson
PDF of abstract here
Natural iodine-129 as a ground-water tracer
1984
Natural iodine-129 as a ground-water tracer
Fabryka-Martin, June Taylor
Master's Thesis
Hydrology
Stanley N. Davis
PDF of abstract here
Thermonuclear chlorine-36 in arid soil
1983
Thermonuclear chlorine-36 in arid soil
Trotman, Kenneth Neil
Master's Thesis
Hydrology
Stanley N. Davis
PDF of abstract here