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Dive into the research topics where Timothy D. McCobb is active.

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Featured researches published by Timothy D. McCobb.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2016

Hydrologic controls on nitrogen cycling processes and functional gene abundance in sediments of a groundwater flow-through lake

Deborah L. Stoliker; Deborah A. Repert; Richard L. Smith; Bongkeun Song; Denis R. LeBlanc; Timothy D. McCobb; Christopher H. Conaway; Sung Pil Hyun; Dong-Chan Koh; Hee Sun Moon; Douglas B. Kent

The fate and transport of inorganic nitrogen (N) is a critically important issue for human and aquatic ecosystem health because discharging N-contaminated groundwater can foul drinking water and cause algal blooms. Factors controlling N-processing were examined in sediments at three sites with contrasting hydrologic regimes at a lake on Cape Cod, MA. These factors included water chemistry, seepage rates and direction of groundwater flow, and the abundance and potential rates of activity of N-cycling microbial communities. Genes coding for denitrification, anaerobic ammonium oxidation (anammox), and nitrification were identified at all sites regardless of flow direction or groundwater dissolved oxygen concentrations. Flow direction was, however, a controlling factor in the potential for N-attenuation via denitrification in the sediments. Potential rates of denitrification varied from 6 to 4500 pmol N/g/h from the inflow to the outflow side of the lake, owing to fundamental differences in the supply of labile organic matter. The results of laboratory incubations suggested that when anoxia and limiting labile organic matter prevailed, the potential existed for concomitant anammox and denitrification. Where oxic lake water was downwelling, potential rates of nitrification at shallow depths were substantial (1640 pmol N/g/h). Rates of anammox, denitrification, and nitrification may be linked to rates of organic N-mineralization, serving to increase N-mobility and transport downgradient.


Journal of Environmental Quality | 2015

Importance of the Colmation Layer in the Transport and Removal of Cyanobacteria, Viruses, and Dissolved Organic Carbon during Natural Lake-Bank Filtration

Ronald W. Harvey; David W. Metge; Denis R. LeBlanc; Jennifer C. Underwood; George R. Aiken; Kenna D. Butler; Timothy D. McCobb; Jay Jasperse

This study focused on the importance of the colmation layer in the removal of cyanobacteria, viruses, and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) during natural bank filtration. Injection-and-recovery studies were performed at two shallow (0.5 m deep), sandy, near-shore sites at the southern end of Ashumet Pond, a waste-impacted, kettle pond on Cape Cod, MA, that is subject to periodic blooms of cyanobacteria and continuously recharges a sole-source drinking-water aquifer. The experiment involved assessing the transport behaviors of bromide (conservative tracer), sp. IU625 (cyanobacterium, 2.6 ± 0.2 µm), AS-1 (tailed cyanophage, 110 nm long), MS2 (coliphage, 26 nm diameter), and carboxylate-modified microspheres (1.7 µm diameter) introduced to the colmation layer using a bag-and-barrel (Lee-type) seepage meter. The injectate constituents were tracked as they were advected across the pond water-groundwater interface and through the underlying aquifer sediments under natural-gradient conditions past push-point samplers placed at ∼30-cm intervals along a 1.2-m-long, diagonally downward flow path. More than 99% of the microspheres, IU625, MS2, AS-1, and ∼44% of the pond DOC were removed in the colmation layer (upper 25 cm of poorly sorted bottom sediments) at two test locations characterized by dissimilar seepage rates (1.7 vs. 0.26 m d). Retention profiles in recovered core material indicated that >82% of the attached IU625 were in the top 3 cm of bottom sediments. The colmation layer was also responsible for rapid changes in the character of the DOC and was more effective (by three orders of magnitude) at removing microspheres than was the underlying 20-cm-thick segment of sediment.


Journal of Environmental Management | 2018

Evaluating long-term patterns of decreasing groundwater discharge through a lake-bottom permeable reactive barrier

Timothy D. McCobb; Martin A. Briggs; Denis R. LeBlanc; Frederick D. Day-Lewis; Carole D. Johnson

Identifying and quantifying groundwater exchange is critical when considering contaminant fate and transport at the groundwater/surface-water interface. In this paper, areally distributed temperature and point seepage measurements are used to efficiently assess spatial and temporal groundwater discharge patterns through a glacial-kettle lakebed area containing a zero-valent iron permeable reactive barrier (PRB). Concern was that the PRB was becoming less permeable with time owing to biogeochemical processes within the PRB. Patterns of groundwater discharge over an 8-year period were examined using fiber-optic distributed temperature sensing (FO-DTS) and snapshot-in-time point measurements of temperature. The resulting thermal maps show complex and uneven distributions of temperatures across the lakebed and highlight zones of rapid seepage near the shoreline and along the outer boundaries of the PRB. Repeated thermal mapping indicates an increase in lakebed temperatures over time at periods of similar stage and surface-water temperature. Flux rates in six seepage meters permanently installed on the lakebed in the PRB area decreased on average by 0.021 md-1 (or about 4.5 percent) annually between 2004 and 2015. Modeling of diurnal temperature signals from shallow vertical profiles yielded mean flux values ranging from 0.39 to 1.15 md-1, with stronger fluxes generally related to colder lakebed temperatures. The combination of an increase in lakebed temperatures, declines in direct seepage, and observations of increased cementation of the lakebed surface provide in situ evidence that the permeability of the PRB is declining. The presence of temporally persistent rapid seepage zones is also discussed.


Water-Resources Investigations Report | 2003

Phosphorus in a ground-water contaminant plume discharging to Ashumet Pond, Cape Cod, Massachusetts, 1999

Timothy D. McCobb; Denis R. LeBlanc; Donald A. Walter; Kathryn M. Hess; Douglas B. Kent; Richard L. Smith


Ground Water Monitoring and Remediation | 2009

Monitoring the Removal of Phosphate from Ground Water Discharging through a Pond-Bottom Permeable Reactive Barrier

Timothy D. McCobb; Denis R. LeBlanc; Andrew J. Massey


Scientific Investigations Report | 2016

Potential effects of sea-level rise on the depth to saturated sediments of the Sagamore and Monomoy flow lenses on Cape Cod, Massachusetts

Donald A. Walter; Timothy D. McCobb; John P. Masterson; Michael N. Fienen


Open-File Report | 2008

Submarine Hydrogeological Data from Cape Cod National Seashore

V.A. Cross; John F. Bratton; John Crusius; John A. Colman; Timothy D. McCobb


Water-Resources Investigations Report | 2002

Detection of fresh ground water and a contaminant plume beneath Red Brook Harbor, Cape Cod, Massachusetts, 2000

Timothy D. McCobb; Denis R. LeBlanc


Scientific Investigations Report | 2018

Geochemical conditions and nitrogen transport in nearshore groundwater and the subterranean estuary at a Cape Cod embayment, East Falmouth, Massachusetts, 2013–14

John A. Colman; Denis R. LeBlanc; J.K. Bohlke; Timothy D. McCobb; Kevin D. Kroeger; Marcel Belaval; Thomas C. Cambareri; Gillian F. Pirolli; T. Wallace Brooks; Mary E. Garren; Tobias B. Stover; Ann Keeley


Hydrology and Earth System Sciences Discussions | 2018

Working backwards from streambed thermal anomalies: hydrogeologic controls on preferential brook trout spawning habitat in a coastal stream

Martin A. Briggs; Judson W. Harvey; Stephen T. Hurley; Donald O. Rosenberry; Timothy D. McCobb; D. Dale Werkema; John W. Lane

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Denis R. LeBlanc

United States Geological Survey

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Douglas B. Kent

United States Geological Survey

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Richard L. Smith

United States Geological Survey

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Deborah A. Repert

United States Geological Survey

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J.K. Bohlke

United States Geological Survey

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Deborah L. Stoliker

United States Geological Survey

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David W. Metge

United States Geological Survey

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Donald A. Walter

United States Geological Survey

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Jennifer C. Underwood

United States Geological Survey

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John A. Colman

United States Geological Survey

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