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1.
Ground Water ; 46(3): 354-71, 2008.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18194326

ABSTRACT

A study using multiple techniques provided insight into tectonic influences on ground water systems; the results can help to understand ground water systems in the tectonically active western United States and other parts of the world. Ground water in the San Bernardino Valley (Arizona, United States and Sonora, Mexico) is the main source of water for domestic use, cattle ranching (the primary industry), and the preservation of threatened and endangered species. To improve the understanding of ground water occurrence, movement, and sustainability, an investigation was conducted using a number of complementary methods, including major ion geochemistry, isotope hydrology, analysis of gases dissolved in ground water, aquifer testing, geophysics, and an examination of surface and subsurface geology. By combining information from multiple lines of investigation, a more complete picture of the basin hydrogeology was assembled than would have been possible using fewer methods. The results show that the hydrogeology of the San Bernardino Valley is markedly different than that of its four neighboring basins in the United States. The differences include water quality, chemical evolution, storage, and residence time. The differences result from the locally unique geology of the San Bernardino Valley, which is due to the presence of a magmatically active accommodation zone (a zone separating two regions of normal faults with opposite dips). The geological differences and the resultant hydrological differences between the San Bernardino Valley and its neighboring basins may serve as a model for the distinctive nature of chemical evolution of ground water in other basins with locally distinct tectonic histories.


Subject(s)
Disasters , Environmental Monitoring/methods , Water Movements , Water Pollution/analysis , Water Supply/analysis , Animals , Animals, Domestic , Arizona , Cattle , Geological Phenomena , Geology , Housing , Humans , Mexico , Radioisotopes/analysis , Radioisotopes/chemistry , Risk Assessment , United States , Water Pollution/adverse effects
2.
Science ; 312(5779): 1510-3, 2006 Jun 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16763146

ABSTRACT

Isotopic records from polar ice cores imply globally asynchronous warming at the end of the last glaciation. However, 10Be exposure dates show that large-scale retreat of mid-latitude Last Glacial Maximum glaciers commenced at about the same time in both hemispheres. The timing of retreat is consistent with the onset of temperature and atmospheric CO2 increases in Antarctic ice cores. We suggest that a global trend of rising summer temperatures at the end of the Last Glacial Maximum was obscured in North Atlantic regions by hypercold winters associated with unusually extensive winter sea ice.

3.
Science ; 302(5647): 1021-4, 2003 Nov 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14605364

ABSTRACT

A large reservoir of bioavailable nitrogen (up to approximately 10(4) kilograms of nitrogen per hectare, as nitrate) has been previously overlooked in studies of global nitrogen distribution. The reservoir has been accumulating in subsoil zones of arid regions throughout the Holocene. Consideration of the subsoil reservoir raises estimates of vadose-zone nitrogen inventories by 14 to 71% for warm deserts and arid shrublands worldwide and by 3 to 16% globally. Subsoil nitrate accumulation indicates long-term leaching from desert soils, impelling further evaluation of nutrient dynamics in xeric ecosystems. Evidence that subsoil accumulations are readily mobilized raises concern about groundwater contamination after land-use or climate change.


Subject(s)
Desert Climate , Ecosystem , Nitrates/analysis , Soil/analysis , Atmosphere , Chlorides/analysis , Chlorides/metabolism , Nitrates/metabolism , Plant Roots/metabolism , Plants/metabolism , Southwestern United States , Water/chemistry
4.
Ground Water ; 40(3): 217, 2002.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12019636
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