Publications by authors named "Jessica R Meyer"

Article Synopsis
  • Hydrocarbon spills can alter the geochemical conditions of aquifers, leading to the formation of biogeochemical zones that impact water quality.
  • Monitoring in a contaminated aquifer showed that radium (Ra) levels in the groundwater were significantly higher near the spill site, linked to conditions affecting metal oxides.
  • While Ra levels were below U.S. drinking water standards, the findings highlight the necessity to study radium and trace elements in areas impacted by hydrocarbon contamination.
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A complex mixture of dissolved organic contaminants, emanating from a many decades-old, residual, dense non-aqueous phase liquid (DNAPL) source, migrates through unconfined, moderately heterogeneous, glacial-derived sediments and sedimentary rock in a residential area of Dane County, Wisconsin, USA. A portion of this contaminant plume intersects a large man-made pond, roughly 400 m downgradient of the source zone. Depth-discrete, multilevel groundwater sampling, detailed sedimentological logs, and hydraulic head profiles were used to delineate the spatial distribution of hydraulic, geologic, organic contaminant, and redox hydrochemical conditions within the established plume along two transects immediately upgradient of the pond.

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Dissolved phase contaminants, transported by diffusion into the low permeability matrix of fractured sedimentary rock, pose a challenge to groundwater cleanup efforts because this stored mass may persist even when the upgradient source zone is removed. In this context, if contaminant biodegradation takes place within the low permeability matrix, plume persistence may be substantially reduced. Therefore, it is important to characterize microbial communities within the low permeability, rock matrix pores, instead of only from groundwater samples, which represent biomass from fast flowing fractures.

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This paper demonstrates a maximum likelihood (ML)-based approach to derive representative ("best guess") contaminant concentrations from data with censored values (e.g., less than the detection limit).

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Organic solvent (i.e., dense nonaqueous phase liquid, DNAPL) migration in the subsurface is known to be extremely sensitive to geologic heterogeneity.

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Recent media coverage has highlighted cases in which young suspects were wrongly convicted because they provided interrogation-induced false confessions. Although youth may be more highly suggestible and easily influenced by authority than adults, police are trained to use the same psychologically coercive and deceptive tactics with youth as with adults. This investigation is the first standard documentation of the reported interrogation practices of law enforcement and police beliefs about the reliability of these techniques and their knowledge of child development.

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This article examines the legal histories and social contexts of testimony and interrogation involving minors, developmental research on suggestibility and judgment, interactions between development and legal/sociological contexts, and the reasoning behind how minors are treated in different legal contexts. The authors argue (a) that young witnesses, victims, and suspects alike possess youthful characteristics that influence their ability to validly inform legal processes, some of which were recently recognized by the Supreme Court as they apply to the juvenile death penalty, and (b) that consideration should be given to reforming current practices in the context of juvenile interrogation. ((c) 2006 APA, all rights reserved).

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