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Dive into the research topics where Tamara Ivahnenko is active.

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Featured researches published by Tamara Ivahnenko.


Journal of The American Water Resources Association | 2011

Nutrient Loadings to Streams of the Continental United States from Municipal and Industrial Effluent

Molly A. Maupin; Tamara Ivahnenko

Abstract Data from the United States Environmental Protection Agency Permit Compliance System national database were used to calculate annual total nitrogen (TN) and total phosphorus (TP) loads to surface waters from municipal and industrial facilities in six major regions of the United States for 1992, 1997, and 2002. Concentration and effluent flow data were examined for approximately 118,250 facilities in 45 states and the District of Columbia. Inconsistent and incomplete discharge locations, effluent flows, and effluent nutrient concentrations limited the use of these data for calculating nutrient loads. More concentrations were reported for major facilities, those discharging more than 1 million gallons per day, than for minor facilities, and more concentrations were reported for TP than for TN. Analytical methods to check and improve the quality of the Permit Compliance System data were used. Annual loads were calculated using “typical pollutant concentrations” to supplement missing concentrations based on the type and size of facilities. Annual nutrient loads for over 26,600 facilities were calculated for at least one of the three years. Sewage systems represented 74% of all TN loads and 58% of all TP loads. This work represents an initial set of data to develop a comprehensive and consistent national database of point-source nutrient loads. These loads can be used to inform a wide range of water-quality management, watershed modeling, and research efforts at multiple scales.


Water Research | 2001

Changes in sample collection and analytical techniques and effects on retrospective comparability of low-level concentrations of trace elements in ground water.

Tamara Ivahnenko; Zoltan Szabo; Jacob Gibs

Ground-water sampling techniques were modified to reduce random low-level contamination during collection of filtered water samples for determination of trace-element concentrations. The modified sampling techniques were first used in New Jersey by the US Geological Survey in 1994 along with inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) analysis to determine the concentrations of 18 trace elements at the one microgram-per-liter (microg/L) level in the oxic water of the unconfined sand and gravel Kirkwood-Cohansey aquifer system. The revised technique tested included a combination of the following: collection of samples (1) with flow rates of about 2 L per minute, (2) through acid-washed single-use disposable tubing and (3) a single-use disposable 0.45-microm pore size capsule filter, (4) contained within portable glove boxes, (5) in a dedicated clean sampling van, (6) only after turbidity stabilized at values less than 2 nephelometric turbidity units (NTU), when possible. Quality-assurance data, obtained from equipment blanks and split samples, indicated that trace element concentrations, with the exception of iron, chromium, aluminum, and zinc, measured in the samples collected in 1994 were not subject to random contamination at 1 microg/L. Results from samples collected in 1994 were compared to those from samples collected in 1991 from the same 12 PVC-cased observation wells using the available sampling and analytical techniques at that time. Concentrations of copper, lead, manganese and zinc were statistically significantly lower in samples collected in 1994 than in 1991. Sampling techniques used in 1994 likely provided trace-element data that represented concentrations in the aquifer with less bias than data from 1991 when samples were collected without the same degree of attention to sample handling.


Science of The Total Environment | 2005

Mercury concentrations in water from an unconfined aquifer system, New Jersey coastal plain

Julia L. Barringer; Zoltan Szabo; Leon J. Kauffman; T.H. Barringer; Paul E. Stackelberg; Tamara Ivahnenko; Shilpa Rajagopalan; David P. Krabbenhoft


Ground Water | 2000

Change in Field Turbidity and Trace Element Concentrations During Well Purging

Jacob Gibs; Zoltan Szabo; Tamara Ivahnenko; Franceska D. Wilde


Open-File Report | 1996

Use of an ultra-clean sampling technique with inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry to determine trace-element concentrations in water from the Kirkwood-Cohansey Aquifer system, coastal plain, New Jersey

Tamara Ivahnenko; Zoltan Szabo; G.S. Hall


Water-Resources Investigations Report | 2003

Occurrence and temporal variability of methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE) and other volatile organic compounds in select sources of drinking water : results of the focused survey

Gregory C. Delzer; Tamara Ivahnenko


Open-File Report | 2001

A review of literature for methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE) in sources of drinking water in the United States

Gregory C. Delzer; Tamara Ivahnenko


Circular | 2018

Estimated use of water in the United States in 2015

Cheryl A. Dieter; Molly A. Maupin; Rodney R. Caldwell; Melissa A. Harris; Tamara Ivahnenko; John K. Lovelace; Nancy L. Barber; Kristin S. Linsey


Water-Resources Investigations Report | 1997

Relation of hydrogeologic characteristics to distribution of radioactivity in ground water, Newark Basin, New Jersey

Zoltan Szabo; Ticie A. Taylor; Dorothy F. Payne; Tamara Ivahnenko


Scientific Investigations Report | 2018

Comparison of U.S. Geological Survey and Bureau of Reclamation water-use reporting in the Colorado River Basin

Breton Bruce; James Prairie; Molly A. Maupin; Jeremy Dodds; David A.V. Eckhardt; Tamara Ivahnenko; Paul Matuska; Eric J. Evenson; Alan Harrison

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Zoltan Szabo

United States Geological Survey

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Molly A. Maupin

United States Geological Survey

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Jacob Gibs

United States Geological Survey

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David P. Krabbenhoft

United States Geological Survey

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Franceska D. Wilde

United States Geological Survey

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Julia L. Barringer

United States Geological Survey

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Leon J. Kauffman

United States Geological Survey

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Paul E. Stackelberg

United States Geological Survey

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Shilpa Rajagopalan

United States Geological Survey

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T.H. Barringer

United States Geological Survey

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