3 research outputs found

    Distribution Of Dissolved And Particulate Organic Carbon In Alaskan Polar, Sub-Polar And Estuarine Waters

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    Thesis (Ph.D.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 197

    The Role of Snowmelt and Spring Rainfall in Inorganic Nutrient Fluxes from a Large Temperate Watershed, the Androscoggin River Basin (Maine and New Hampshire)

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    The importance of snowmelt and spring rainfall to water and nutrient exports from macro-scale watersheds (\u3e1000 km2) is not well established. Data collected from the Androscoggin River watershed (Maine and New Hampshire) between February 1999 and March 2002 show that the 90-day spring melt period accounted for 39โ€“57% of total annual discharge and is likely driven both by snowpack melting and spring rainfall. While large loads of dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN) are delivered to the watershed from snowmelt and rain (from 1.16ร— 106 to 1.61ร— 106 kg N over the study years), only one third of this N load is exported from the basin during the snowmelt period (0.40ร— 106โ€“0.48 ร— 106 kg N). Despite reduced residence time and temperature limitations on biological N retention, there is a poor mass balance between DIN input to the watershed and the nitrogen exported from mouth of the river. Inferences from a geochemical hydrograph separation suggests that approximately 51โ€“63% of the water leaving the mouth of the Androscoggin river is from these โ€˜newโ€™ water sources (rain and snowmelt) while 37โ€“49% is from DIN depleted soil and groundwater. Mixing of water from different sources, as well as nutrient retention by dams in the upper watershed, may account for the large discrepancy between DIN inputs and exports from this watershed
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