Record Display for the EPA National Library Catalog

RECORD NUMBER: 22 OF 188

Main Title Bacteriophage Transport in Sandy Soil and Fractured Tuff.
Author Bales, R. C. ; Gerba, C. P. ; Grondin, G. H. ; Jensen, S. L. ;
CORP Author Arizona Univ., Tucson.;Robert S. Kerr Environmental Research Lab., Ada, OK.;Geological Survey, Reston, VA.
Publisher c1989
Year Published 1989
Report Number EPA-R-81147 ;USGS-14-08-0001-G-1501; EPA/600/J-89/279;
Stock Number PB90-185299
Additional Subjects Bacteriophages ; Microbiology ; Colloids ; Water pollution ; Hazardous materials ; Viruses ; Graphs(Charts) ; Ground water ; Soil ; Contaminants ; Reprints ; Biological transport ; Isoelectric point
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NTIS  PB90-185299 Some EPA libraries have a fiche copy filed under the call number shown. 07/26/2022
Collation 9p
Abstract
Bacteriophage transport was investigated in laboratory column experiments using sandy soil, a controlled field study in a sandy wash, and laboratory experiments using fractured rock. In the soil columns, the phage MS-2 exhibited significant dispersion and was excluded from 35 to 40% of the void volume but did not adsorb. Dispersion in the field was similar to that observed in the laboratory. The phage f2 was largely excluded from the porous matrix of the two fractured-rock cores studied, coming through 1.2 and 2.0 times later than predicted on the basis of fracture flow alone. Because of matrix diffusion, nonsorbing solutes were retarded by over a factor of three relative to fracture flow. Results of both granular-medium and fractured-rock experiments illustrate the inability of a solute tracer to provide estimates for dispersion and effective porosity that are applicable to a colloid. Bacteriophage can be used to better estimate the maximum subsurface transport rate of colloidal contaminants through a porous formation. (Copyright (c) 1989 American Society for Microbiology.)