Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Michael Wieczorek is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Michael Wieczorek.


Journal of Environmental Quality | 2008

Variations in Pesticide Leaching Related to Land Use, Pesticide Properties, and Unsaturated Zone Thickness

Richard M. T. Webb; Michael Wieczorek; Bernard T. Nolan; Tracy C. Hancock; Mark W. Sandstrom; Jack E. Barbash; E. Randall Bayless; Richard W. Healy; Joshua I. Linard

Pesticide leaching through variably thick soils beneath agricultural fields in Morgan Creek, Maryland was simulated for water years 1995 to 2004 using LEACHM (Leaching Estimation and Chemistry Model). Fifteen individual models were constructed to simulate five depths and three crop rotations with associated pesticide applications. Unsaturated zone thickness averaged 4.7 m but reached a maximum of 18.7 m. Average annual recharge to ground water decreased from 15.9 to 11.1 cm as the unsaturated zone increased in thickness from 1 to 10 m. These point estimates of recharge are at the lower end of previously published values, which used methods that integrate over larger areas capturing focused recharge in the numerous detention ponds in the watershed. The total amount of applied and leached masses for five parent pesticide compounds and seven metabolites were estimated for the 32-km2 Morgan Creek watershed by associating each hectare to the closest one-dimensional model analog of model depth and crop rotation scenario as determined from land-use surveys. LEACHM parameters were set such that branched, serial, first-order decay of pesticides and metabolites was realistically simulated. Leaching is predicted to be greatest for shallow soils and for persistent compounds with low sorptivity. Based on simulation results, percent parent compounds leached within the watershed can be described by a regression model of the form e(-depth) (a ln t1/2-b ln K OC) where t1/2 is the degradation half-life in aerobic soils, K OC is the organic carbon normalized sorption coefficient, and a and b are fitted coefficients (R2 = 0.86, p value = 7 x 10(-9)).


Geological Society of America Bulletin | 2012

Erosion, storage, and transport of sediment in two subbasins of the Rio Puerco, New Mexico

Allen C. Gellis; Milan J. Pavich; Amy L. Ellwein; S. Aby; I. Clark; Michael Wieczorek; R. Viger

Arroyos in the American Southwest proceed through cut-and-fill cycles that operate at centennial to millennial time scales. The geomorphic community has put much effort into understanding the causes of arroyo cutting in the late Quaternary and in the modern record (late 1800s), while little effort has gone into understanding how arroyos fill and the sources of this fill. Here, we successfully develop a geographic information system (GIS)–modeled sediment budget that is based on detailed field measurements of hillslope and channel erosion and deposition. Field measurements were made in two arroyo basins draining different lithologies and undergoing different land disturbance (Volcano Hill Wash, 9.30 km 2 ; Arroyo Chavez, 2.11 km 2 ) over a 3 yr period. Both basins have incised channels that formed in response to the late nineteenth-century incision of the Rio Puerco. Large volumes of sediment were generated during arroyo incision, equal to more than 100 yr of the current annual total sediment load (bed load + suspended load) in each basin. Downstream reaches in both arroyos are presently aggrading, and the main source of the sediment is from channel erosion in upstream reaches and first- and second-order tributaries. The sediment budget shows that channel erosion is the largest source of sediment in the current stage of the arroyo cycle: 98% and 80% of the sediment exported out of Volcano Hill Wash and Arroyo Chavez, respectively. The geomorphic surface most affected by arroyo incision and one of the most important sediment sources is the valley alluvium, where channel erosion, gullying, soil piping, and grazing all occur. Erosion rates calculated for the entire Volcano Hill Wash (–0.26 mm/yr) and Arroyo Chavez (–0.53 mm/yr) basins are higher than the modeled upland erosion rates in each basin, reflecting the large contributions from channel erosion. Erosion rates in each basin are affected by a combination of land disturbance (grazing) and lithology—erodible sandstones and shales in Arroyo Chavez compared with basalt for Volcano Hill Wash. Despite these differences, hillslope sediment yields are similar to long-term denudation rates. As the arroyo fills over time from mouth to headwaters, hillslope sediment becomes a more significant sediment source.


Hydrological Processes | 2013

Suspended sediment source apportionment in Chesapeake Bay watershed using Bayesian chemical mass balance receptor modeling

Arash Massoudieh; Allen C. Gellis; William S.L. Banks; Michael Wieczorek


Journal of Environmental Quality | 2016

High Nitrate Concentrations in Some Midwest United States Streams in 2013 after the 2012 Drought

Peter C. Van Metre; Jeffrey W. Frey; MaryLynn Musgrove; Naomi Nakagaki; Sharon L. Qi; Barbara J. Mahler; Michael Wieczorek; Daniel T. Button


Archive | 2006

THE WATER, ENERGY, AND BIOGEOCHEMICAL MODEL (WEBMOD): A TOPMODEL APPLICATION DEVELOPED WITHIN THE MODULAR MODELING SYSTEM

Richard M. T. Webb; Joshua I. Linard; Michael Wieczorek


Scientific Investigations Report | 2009

Identifying Hydrologic Processes in Agricultural Watersheds Using Precipitation-Runoff Models

Joshua I. Linard; David M. Wolock; Richard M. T. Webb; Michael Wieczorek


Open-File Report | 2016

Estimating natural monthly streamflows in California and the likelihood of anthropogenic modification

Daren M. Carlisle; David M. Wolock; Jeannette K. Howard; Theodore E. Grantham; Kurt A. Fesenmyer; Michael Wieczorek


Journal of The American Water Resources Association | 2018

A Database of Natural Monthly Streamflow Estimates from 1950 to 2015 for the Conterminous United States

Matthew P. Miller; Daren M. Carlisle; David M. Wolock; Michael Wieczorek


Hydrological Processes | 2018

Estimating dominant runoff modes across the conterminous United States

Brian Buchanan; Daniel A. Auerbach; James Knighton; D. Evensen; Daniel R. Fuka; Zachary M. Easton; Michael Wieczorek; Josephine A. Archibald; B. McWilliams; M. Todd Walter


Archive | 2016

Empirical models for estimating baseline streamflows in California and their likelihood of anthropogenic modification

Daren M. Carlisle; David M. Wolock; Jeannette K. Howard; Theodore E. Grantham; Kurt A. Fesenmyer; Michael Wieczorek

Collaboration


Dive into the Michael Wieczorek's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David M. Wolock

United States Geological Survey

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Joshua I. Linard

United States Geological Survey

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Daren M. Carlisle

United States Geological Survey

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Richard M. T. Webb

United States Geological Survey

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Allen C. Gellis

United States Geological Survey

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Amy L. Ellwein

University of New Mexico

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Arash Massoudieh

The Catholic University of America

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge