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August 2007 –Tracer Tests and Sampling of Wastewater Plume Are Highlights of Ongoing Field Season During June-September 2007, Cape Cod Toxics scientists are using ground-water tracer experiments to examine denitrification in the presence of dissolved iron, the chemotaxis of mobile subsurface bacteria, and the development of antibiotic resistance of subsurface bacteria exposed to antibiotics typically present in municipal wastewater. The Cape Cod group also is conducting an extensive sampling of the wastewater plume to examine the hydrologic and geochemical evolution of the plume since the plume was first described in 1978-79.
June 2007 – Chemotactic Bacteria May Be Able to “Swim” Toward Ground-Water Contaminants
Cape Cod Toxics scientists report in a recent issue of Advances in Water Resources that some ground-water bacteria may be able to “swim” in the direction of increasing concentrations of some chemicals. This chemotactic response may be useful for biorestoration of contaminated aquifers. Field experiments are ongoing at the Cape Cod site to study this microbial transport process in granular aquifers (Ford and Harvey, 2007).
April 2007 - LeBlanc Presents the MIT Freeman Lecture
Denis LeBlanc, coordinator of the Cape Cod Toxics Site, presented the 2007 John R. Freeman Lecture at MIT on April 6. The talk, titled "Cape Cod's Billion Dollar Ground-Water Cleanup - The Hydrologic Story," was well-attended by a diverse group of environmental professionals from the academic, regulatory, scientific, and consulting communities. The annual Freeman Lecture is sponsored by the Boston Society of Civil Engineers and the MIT Dept. of Civil and Environmental Engineering (http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/2007/capecodclean.html).
March 2007 - Presentations Given by Cape Toxics
Scientists at Scientific Meeting
Findings from the Cape Cod Toxics
Site were described in presentations at the 2007 Northeastern
Section GSA Meeting in Durham, NH, in March 2007. Denis
LeBlanc organized a special session on the effects
of aquifer recharge with treated wastewater and urban
runoff on ground-water quality. Work from Cape Cod
on the natural
restoration of a treated-wastewater plume, borehole-dilution
tests, phosphorus
removal by a geochemical barrier, and numerical
modeling to estimate nitrate loading to coastal estuaries was
presented.
February 2007 - Cape Cod Toxics Site Meeting
More than 25 people participated in the annual Cape
Cod Toxics Site research meeting, which was held at the MMR
on February 13-15, 2007. The participants included USGS scientists
from the water, geology, and biology disciplines, university colleagues,
DOD managers of the MMR cleanup, and USEPA and MADEP staff.
December 2006 - Cape Cod Toxics Site Releases Newly
Designed Web Site
The Cape Cod Toxic Substances Hydrology Site has redesigned
its web site to provide more up-to-date and complete information about past
and ongoing research at the site. The new site includes links to the project's
publications, selected data sets, web pages of individual researchers, and
associated projects with the Department of Defense agencies cleaning up ground
water at the Massachusetts Military Reservation.
October 2006 - USGS Scientist Describes Advances of Importance to Aquifer Storage and Recovery Projects in the Science and Technology of Microbial Communities in Ground Water
Ronald Harvey was an invited speaker at the meeting, "Aquifer
Storage and Recovery VI," which was held in Orlando, FL, on October 16-17, 2006, and organized by the American Groundwater Trust. His talk was titled, "A National Perspective on New Technology, Innovative Methods, and Future Directions with Respect to Research on Microbial Communities in Ground Water." Many of the innovation methods he described were developed at the Cape Cod Toxic Substances Hydrology Research Site. More information can be found at http://soundwaves.usgs.gov/2007/03/meetings.html.
October 2006 - Cape Cod Toxics talks presented at the
2006 GSA Meeting
Cape Cod Toxics scientists presented three talks at
the Geological Society of America Annual Meeting in Philadelphia on October
22-25, 2006. The topics included an overview of multidisciplinary study of
contaminant transport at the Cape site, the development and use of fluorescing
proteins to study bacterial transport in ground water, and the use of stochastic
methods to improve ground-water-flow model calibration on Western Cape Cod.
Feb. 2006 - Natural Attenuation Decreasing Nitrogen
and Organic Carbon Concentrations in Treated-Wastewater Plume
Cape Cod Toxics scientists report in the February
2006 issue of Environmental Science & Technology that natural attenuation
processes are gradually diminishing concentrations of nitrate, ammonium,
and dissolved organic carbon in the wastewater-contaminated zone near the
abandoned disposal beds. They identify ammonium nitrification and nitrate
denitrification as important microbial processes cleaning up the contaminated
zone. |