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Dive into the research topics where Randell J. Laczniak is active.

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Featured researches published by Randell J. Laczniak.


Geology | 1999

Sensing the ups and downs of Las Vegas: InSAR reveals structural control of land subsidence and aquifer-system deformation

Falk Amelung; Devin L. Galloway; John W. Bell; Howard A. Zebker; Randell J. Laczniak

Land subsidence in Las Vegas, Nevada, United States, between April 1992 and December 1997 was measured using spaceborne interferometric synthetic aperture radar. The detailed deformation maps clearly show that the spatial extent of subsidence is controlled by geologic structures (faults) and sediment composition (clay thickness). The maximum detected subsidence during the 5.75 yr period is 19 cm. Comparison with leveling data indicates that the subsidence rates declined during the past decade as a result of rising ground-water levels brought about by a net reduction in ground-water extraction. Temporal analysis also detects seasonal subsidence and uplift patterns, which provide information about the elastic and inelastic properties of the aquifer system and their spatial variability.


Scientific Investigations Report | 2005

Hydraulic Characterization of Overpressured Tuffs in Central Yucca Flat, Nevada Test Site, Nye County, Nevada

Keith J. Halford; Randell J. Laczniak; Devin L. Galloway

A sequence of buried, bedded, air-fall tuffs has been used extensively as a host medium for underground nuclear tests detonated in the central part of Yucca Flat at the Nevada Test Site. Water levels within these bedded tuffs have been elevated hundreds of meters in areas where underground nuclear tests were detonated below the water table. Changes in the ground-water levels within these tuffs and changes in the rate and distribution of land-surface subsidence above these tuffs indicate that pore-fluid pressures have been slowly depressurizing since the cessation of nuclear testing in 1992. Declines in ground-water levels concurrent with regional land subsidence are explained by poroelastic deformation accompanying ground-water flow as fluids pressurized by underground nuclear detonations drain from the host tuffs into the overlying water table and underlying regional carbonate aquifer. A hydraulic conductivity of about 3 x 10-6 m/d and a specific storage of 9 x 10-6 m-1 are estimated using ground-water flow models. Cross-sectional and three-dimensional ground-water flow models were calibrated to measured water levels and to land-subsidence rates measured using Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar. Model results are consistent and indicate that about 2 million m3 of ground water flowed from the tuffs to the carbonate rock as a result of pressurization caused by underground nuclear testing. The annual rate of inflow into the carbonate rock averaged about 0.008 m/yr between 1962 and 2005, and declined from 0.005 m/yr in 2005 to 0.0005 m/yr by 2300.


Scientific Investigations Report | 2008

Predevelopment Water-Level Contours for Aquifers in the Rainier Mesa and Shoshone Mountain area of the Nevada Test Site, Nye County, Nevada

Joseph M. Fenelon; Randell J. Laczniak; Keith J. Halford

Contaminants introduced into the subsurface of the Nevada Test Site at Rainier Mesa and Shoshone Mountain by underground nuclear testing are of concern to the U.S. Department of Energy and regulators responsible for protecting human health and safety. Although contaminants were introduced into low-permeability rocks above the regional flow system, the potential for contaminant movement away from the underground test areas and into the accessible environment is greatest by ground-water transport. The primary hydrologic control on this transport is evaluated and examined through a series of contour maps developed to represent the water-level distribution within each of the major aquifers underlying the area. Aquifers were identified and their extents delineated by merging and analyzing multiple hydrostratigraphic framework models developed by other investigators from existing geologic information. The contoured water-level distribution in each major aquifer was developed from a detailed evaluation and assessment of available water-level measurements. Multiple spreadsheets that accompany this report provide pertinent water-level and geologic data by well or drill hole. Aquifers are mapped, presented, and discussed in general terms as being one of three aquifer types—volcanic aquifer, upper carbonate aquifer, or lower carbonate aquifer. Each of these aquifer types was subdivided and mapped as independent continuous and isolated aquifers, based on the continuity of its component rock. Ground-water flow directions, as related to the transport of test-generated contaminants, were developed from water-level contours and are presented and discussed for each of the continuous aquifers. Contoured water-level altitudes vary across the study area and range from more than 5,000 feet in the volcanic aquifer beneath a recharge area in the northern part of the study area to less than 2,450 feet in the lower carbonate aquifer in the southern part of the study area. Variations in water-level altitudes within any single continuous aquifer range from a few hundred feet in a lower carbonate aquifer to just more than 1,100 feet in a volcanic aquifer. Flow directions throughout the study area are dominantly southward with minor eastward or westward deviations. Primary exceptions are westward flow in the northern part of the volcanic aquifer and eastward flow in the eastern part of the lower carbonate aquifer. Northward flow in the upper and lower carbonate aquifers in the northern part of the study area is possible but cannot be substantiated because data are lacking. Interflow between continuous aquifers is evaluated and mapped to define major flow paths. These flow paths delineate tributary flow systems, which converge to form the regional ground-water flow system. The implications of these tributary flow paths in controlling transport away from the underground test areas at Rainier Mesa and Shoshone Mountain are discussed. The obvious data gaps contributing to uncertainties in the delineation of aquifers and development of water-level contours are identified and evaluated.


Open-File Report | 2003

Estimates of deep percolation beneath native vegetation, irrigated fields, and the Amargosa-river channel, Amargosa Desert, Nye County, Nevada

David A. Stonestrom; David E. Prudic; Randell J. Laczniak; Katherine C. Akstin; Robert A. Boyd; Katherine K. Henkelman


Groundwater Recharge in a Desert Environment: The Southwestern United States | 2013

Tectonic, Climatic, and Land‐Use Controls on Groundwater Recharge in an Arid Alluvial Basin: Amargosa Desert, U.S.A.

David A. Stonestrom; David E. Prudic; Randell J. Laczniak; Katherine C. Akstin


Geophysical Research Letters | 2003

New signatures of underground nuclear tests revealed by satellite radar interferometry

Paul Vincent; Shawn Larsen; Devin L. Galloway; Randell J. Laczniak; William R. Walter; William Foxall; John J. Zucca


Professional Paper | 2007

Focused Ground-Water Recharge in the Amargosa Desert Basin

David A. Stonestrom; David E. Prudic; Michelle A. Walvoord; Jared D. Abraham; Amy E. Stewart-Deaker; Patrick A. Glancy; Jim Constantz; Randell J. Laczniak; Brian J. Andraski


Professional Paper | 2010

Groundwater Flow Systems at the Nevada Test Site, Nevada: A Synthesis of Potentiometric Contours, Hydrostratigraphy, and Geologic Structures

Joseph M. Fenelon; Donald S. Sweetkind; Randell J. Laczniak


Scientific Investigations Report | 2007

Evapotranspiration Rate Measurements of Vegetation Typical of Ground-Water Discharge Areas in the Basin and Range Carbonate-Rock Aquifer System, White Pine County, Nevada, and Adjacent Areas in Nevada and Utah, September 2005-August 2006

Michael T. Moreo; Randell J. Laczniak; David I. Stannard


Scientific Investigations Report | 2010

Interpretation of Flow Logs from Nevada Test Site Boreholes to Estimate Hydraulic conductivity Using Numerical Simulations Constrained by Single-Well Aquifer Tests

C. Amanda Garcia; Keith J. Halford; Randell J. Laczniak

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Keith J. Halford

United States Geological Survey

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David A. Stonestrom

United States Geological Survey

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David E. Prudic

United States Geological Survey

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Devin L. Galloway

United States Geological Survey

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Joseph M. Fenelon

United States Geological Survey

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Alan L. Flint

United States Geological Survey

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Brian J. Andraski

United States Geological Survey

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Donald S. Sweetkind

United States Geological Survey

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Jared D. Abraham

United States Geological Survey

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Jim Constantz

United States Geological Survey

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