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1.
J Occup Environ Med ; 58(8 Suppl 1): S38-43, 2016 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27501103

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: This study presents environmental air samples collected at a US military installation with a solid waste disposal facility (SWDF) containing a burn pit from 2005 through 2012 and compared these results with occupational (breathing zone) samples. METHODS: Particulate matter (PM) environmental samples were collected as part of the installation monitoring program. Service Members in four security positions were monitored for PM and acrolein occupational exposures. RESULTS: The highest recorded PM2.5 concentration occurred at the SWDF. A highly populated sampling site, the Bazaar site, had the highest mean PM10, with the SWDF following in second. Acrolein and respirable PM were considerably higher in the breathing zone samples than environmental samples. CONCLUSIONS: The diversity of results support the concept of a complex environment with multiple polluting sources and changing meteorological and operational conditions.


Subject(s)
Air Pollutants, Occupational/analysis , Environmental Exposure/analysis , Environmental Monitoring , Military Personnel , Occupational Exposure/analysis , Afghanistan , Humans , Incineration , Particle Size , Particulate Matter
2.
Ground Water ; 45(3): 294-308, 2007.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17470119

ABSTRACT

Stable isotope values of hydrogen and oxygen from precipitation and ground water samples were compared by using a volumetrically based mixing equation and stable isotope gradient to estimate the season and location of recharge in four basins. Stable isotopes were sampled at 11 precipitation sites of differing elevation during a 2-year period to quantify seasonal stable isotope contributions as a function of elevation. Supplemental stable isotope data collected by the International Atomic Energy Association during a 14-year period were used to reduce annual variability of the mean seasonal stable isotope data. The stable isotope elevation relationships and local precipitation elevation relationships were combined by using a digital elevation model to calculate the total volumetric contribution of water and stable isotope values as a function of elevation within the basins. The results of these precipitation calculations were compared to measured ground water stable isotope values at the major discharge points near the terminus of the basins. Volumetric precipitation contributions to recharge were adjusted to isolate contributing elevations. This procedure provides an improved representation of recharge contributions within the basins over conventional stable isotope methods. Stable isotope values from wells and springs at the terminus of each basin were used to infer the elevations of precipitation important for recharge of the regional ground water flow system. Ancillary climatic, geologic, and stable isotope values were used to further constrain the location where precipitation is entering the ground water flow system.


Subject(s)
Water Movements , Water Supply/analysis , Climate , Deuterium/analysis , Environmental Monitoring/methods , Models, Theoretical , Oxygen Isotopes/analysis , Seasons , Weather
3.
Ground Water ; 44(5): 630-41, 2006.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16961484

ABSTRACT

Springs along the south rim of the Grand Canyon, Arizona, are important ecological and cultural resources in Grand Canyon National Park and are discharge points for regional and local aquifers of the Coconino Plateau. This study evaluated the applicability of electrical resistance (ER) sensors for measuring diffuse, low-stage (<1.0 cm) intermittent and ephemeral flow in the steep, rocky spring-fed tributaries of the south rim. ER sensors were used to conduct a baseline survey of spring flow timing at eight sites in three spring-fed tributaries in Grand Canyon. Sensors were attached to a nearly vertical rock wall at a spring outlet and were installed in alluvial and bedrock channels. Spring flow timing data inferred by the ER sensors were consistent with observations during site visits, with flow events recorded with collocated streamflow gauging stations and with local precipitation gauges. ER sensors were able to distinguish the presence of flow along nearly vertical rock surfaces with flow depths between 0.3 and 1.0 cm. Laboratory experiments confirmed the ability of the sensors to monitor the timing of diffuse flow on impervious surfaces. A comparison of flow patterns along the stream reaches and at springs identified the timing and location of perennial and intermittent flow, and periods of increased evapotranspiration.


Subject(s)
Fresh Water/analysis , Geology/instrumentation , Water Movements , Arizona , Data Collection , Electric Impedance , Geography , Geology/methods
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