WATERS Network enabling sustainable water resources in a changing world


Supported by the National Science Foundation.

WATERS Combined Test Bed Sites — Susquehanna River Basin and Chesapeake Bay

WATERS Test Bed Site Susquehanna River Basin

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The CUAHSI WATERS Combined Test Bed projects—Susquehanna River Basin and Chesapeake Bay. The Susquehanna River Basin (SRB) is the largest tributary to the Chesapeake Bay. Without this flow the estuary could not sustain its extraordinary diversity and productivity of aquatic life. At the same time, the legacy of human habitation and resource development within the subbasins of the Susquehanna represents the principal source of degradation to the River and the Bay. The dilemma of our water-resource legacy is to balance the competing societal and environmental needs placed on the Susquehanna's freshwater resources. The search for a sustainable future for man and river represents a fundamental challenge from the science policy point of view because we have not yet devised a coherent plan to observe, understand, and predict the complexities of the water, climate, and biogeochemical cycles acting within the basin. We do not yet understand how climate variability, human activities, and ecological change are impacting the river and its related stores of soil moisture and groundwater. There is a clear and present need to frame new hypotheses that will build expand our ability to represent and predict the physical processes acting at the scale of the river basin.

Contact Information

Susquehanna River Basin Site

Site Contacts Address
Principal Investigator:
Christopher J Duffy
Email: cxd11@psu.edu
Phone: (814) 863-4384

Pennsylvania State Univ University Park
110 Technology Center
University Park, PA. 16802-1503
Co-Principal Investigators:
Kevin A Dressler
Email: kxd13@psu.edu
Phone: (814) 865-4700

 

Patrick M Reed
Email: pmr11@psu.edu
Phone: (814) 863-2940

Pennsylvania State University
Penn State Institutes of Energy and the Environment
129 Land and Water Research Building
University Park, PA 16802

Pennsylvania State University
212 Sackett Building
University Park, PA. 16802

Susquehanna River Basin and Chesapeake Bay Site

Site Contacts Address
Co-Principal Investigators:
Michael Piasecki
Email: Michael.Piasecki@drexel.edu
Phone: (215) 895-1721
Drexel University
3201 Arch Street
Philadelphia, PA. 19104

Patrick M Reed
Email: pmr11@psu.edu
Phone: (814) 863-2940

Kevin Dressler
Email: kxd13@psu.edu
Phone: (814) 863-0050
Pennsylvania State University
212 Sackett Building
University Park, PA. 16802

Pennsylvania State University
Penn State Institutes of Energy and the Environment
129 Land and Water Research Building
University Park, PA 16802

William P Ball
Email: bball@jhu.edu
Phone: (410) 516-5434
Johns Hopkins University
3400 N Charles Street
Baltimore, MD 21218-8268

Data Manager(s):
Steve Graham
steveg@psu.edu

Site History

Within the Susquehanna River basin and the greater Chesapeake Bay watershed we are focusing on several sub-watersheds at nested scales to apply integrated modeling and observing. The modeling strategy is to examine physics-based, distributed modeling at nested spatial scales within the Juniata River, a large sub-basin to the Susquehanna River Basin. At present the small watershed model (Shale Hills~20 acres; pictured right) is complete, the intermediate scale watershed is underway (Spruce Creek Watershed ~300 mi2) with preliminary calibration, and the large scale model (Juniata River basin ~3400 mi2) is in planning.

At present we are focusing our research on the Penn State Experimental Forest at approximately 40.66756° N / 77.9347° W. Land use is forested with recreational facilities such as a lake and environmental center. Topography is fairly variable with ~1000 ft of relief over the area. Terrain is underlain by shale and limestone. The Penn State Experimental Forest is located within the Valley and Ridge physiographic province of central Pennsylvania. Hydrologically, it is part of the Susquehanna River basin, the major tributary to Chesapeake Bay. This region happens to receive some of the highest rates of acidic fallout in the US. Broadly, the region represents a dominant landform and ecosystem for the Upper Susquehanna River basin and is a major source area of fresh water supply and a major contributor of non-point source nutrient pollution to the Chesapeake Bay.

Our small-scale testbed at Shale Hills is being coordinated and served via the internet by the Real-Time Hydrologic Network (RTH_Net), a collaborative project among diverse academic departments at Penn State University and other institutions such as Drexel, San Diego Supercomputer Center and Johns Hopkins. The RTH_Net project website is located at www.engr.psu.edu/rth_net/index.htm.

The Penn State Experimental Forest has been the site of water resource and environmental investigations focusing on sustainability of northeastern forests, water yield, and water quality. Legacy data has been collected for approximately 50 years concerning biogeochemical cycling of unmanaged ecosystems with impacts due to climate change and atmospheric deposition. An ongoing 50 year study has looked at the effect of clear-cutting and other forestry techniques on the ecosystem. There is an NADP site at the Leading Ridge Watershed which has long-term record of wet deposition and climate (nadp.sws.uiuc.edu). Additionally it is part of an EPA Long-term Monitoring network of five forested sites being monitored to determine the impacts of reductions in atmospheric deposition on stream chemistry, aquatic and forest ecosystems.


Research Topics

This proposed research plan attempts to demonstrate how a unification of modeling, existing digital data, and new data collection strategies will advance our understanding of river basin water resources and support the design of hydrologic observatories.

  • Research Task 1 - A Synthesis of Community Data and Modeling for Advancing River Basin Science: The Evolving Susquehanna River Basin Experiment (PDF)
  • Research Task 2 - CUAHSI/CLEANER Demonstration and Development of a Test-bed Digital Observatory for the Susquehanna River Basin and Chesapeake Bay (PDF)

Research Web pages